Hard Word
_The N Word_ is not an easy read. That’s hardly surprising, given that the history of the word “nigger” is so brutal and violent. What is surprising, though, is how seamlessly Jabari Asim threads a history through his story of the “n word”: a history not only of the African-American experience but of the American republic itself. His title harkens back to Randall Kennedy’s _Nigger: The Strange Career of a Troublesome Word_ (2002). Asim’s polite title may land a softer blow, but the substance of _The N Word_ delivers a serious pummeling.
Asim, deputy editor of _The Washington Post Book World_, begins by disputing lexicographers’ claims that the first recorded usage of “nigger” was neutral. Jamestown colonist John Rolfe described the arrival in 1619 of “twenty negars” in his diary. In fact, Asim writes, none of the terms—among them “nigger,” “niger,” “negur,” and “negar”—used to refer to black Africans was devoid of negative connotations. Long before the Revolutionary War, black people fought against efforts to dehumanize them through language, but “the notion of black inferiority spread as rapidly as the spirit of independence that enlivened the new nation.”
This article originally appeared in print