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'''Nigger''' is a pejorative term used to refer to dark-skinned people, particularly those of African origin. It is believed to derive from the word ''Negro'', and was common in the ] and ] as recently as the ]. Its implications of racism are so strong that it is now unusual to hear it except in very specialised contexts. Many publications will not even print it, instead using the ] "N-word". '''Nigger''' is a pejorative term used to refer to dark-skinned people, particularly those of African origin. It is believed to derive from the word ''Negro'', and was common in the ] and ] as recently as the ]. Its implications of racism are so strong that it is now unusual to hear it except in very specialised contexts. Many publications will not even print it, instead using the ] "N-word".


See ], which is the currently preferred term in public discourse. In the United States, the term ] is currently preferred in public discourse. However it is inappropriate when talking about non-Americans.


It is worth noting that the word has to some extent been reclaimed by black people in recent years, particularly in America. Comedian and activist ] used it as the title of his best-selling ] in ]. It is worth noting that the word has to some extent been reclaimed by black people in recent years, particularly in America. Comedian and activist ] used it as the title of his best-selling ] in ].

Revision as of 01:29, 1 August 2002

Nigger is a pejorative term used to refer to dark-skinned people, particularly those of African origin. It is believed to derive from the word Negro, and was common in the United States and United Kingdom as recently as the 1960s. Its implications of racism are so strong that it is now unusual to hear it except in very specialised contexts. Many publications will not even print it, instead using the euphemism "N-word".

In the United States, the term African-American is currently preferred in public discourse. However it is inappropriate when talking about non-Americans.

It is worth noting that the word has to some extent been reclaimed by black people in recent years, particularly in America. Comedian and activist Dick Gregory used it as the title of his best-selling autobiography in 1964.

As another illustration of this process of reclaiming the word, in 1967, Muhammad Ali had explained his refusal to be drafted to serve in the Vietnam War by saying, "I got nothing against no Viet Cong. No Vietnamese ever called me nigger."

Many young African-Americans, in particular, use the word to one another without any derogatory implication. In 1988 the album Straight Outta Compton was released by the rap group Niggaz With Attitude -- despite their own use of the word "nigger" the group's name was often glossed as "NWA", perhaps reflecting the extreme discomfort that still surrounds any use of the word.

It should be reiterated that the word is considered extremely offensive other than in the very specific context described above, and is rarely heard outside that context. Indeed, even the sound of the word is offensive to some. Careful speakers often refuse to use niggardly or snigger, even though these terms do not refer either to black people or to characteristics or behavior attributed to black people.

A bureaucrat in the city government of Washington, D.C. was briefly driven from his job in the late 1990s when he was overheard referring in a private conversation to "a niggardly budget", meaning only that it was insufficient and cheap.

External Link

Books

  • ISBN 0375421726 Nigger: The Strange Career of a Troublesome Word, by Randall Kennedy
  • ISBN 0671735608 Nigger: an autobiography, by Dick Gregory

See also: racism, taboo, profanity