Book*hug Press, formerly BookThug Press, is a literary press in Toronto, Canada, founded two decades ago. It originally concentrated on experimental poetry and now publishes contemporary books of literary fiction, literary nonfiction, literature in translation, and poetry. Its emerging and established writer stable is growing.
So why did it feel coerced into changing its founding name?
What is so cancel-culture worthy of the term “thug”? Doesn’t it mean a crook, a punk, a low-life or someone who takes a rough approach to robbing another? Sure, it does. The Oxford English Dictionary says a thug is: a violent, aggressive person, especially one who is a criminal.”
I don’t see any mention of thugs being a black thing.
In fact, the original meaning historically traces back to criminals in India: “A member of a group or organization of robbers and assassins in India who waylaid and strangled their victims, usually travelers, and stole their belongings.”
But somewhere along the years, thug became a word linked to black people specifically, according to some black people. Somehow, to call anyone a thug is racist? What the heck is going on in woke circles that they linguistically torture society into thinking something is fact that simply is not true?
So, because of a backlash by a handful of misguided black social justice warriors, Book Thug Press capitulated. This is a microcosm of our misinformed and oversensitive society.
There is something cool and catchy to combine something cultural and literary — Book, with something criminal — Thug. Would you call a book lover a “book whore” — or videos that obsess over books as “book porn?” Sure you would.
We do this all of the time. We take words from criminals, fighters, and terrorists and link them to good things. “That quarterback has sniper accuracy”; “He writes prolifically and owns his genre with the power of a Mafia kingpin”; “He is a free-speech ninja, a warrior for the First Amendment;” “That book is a knockout!”
Look at the marriage of these words that represent businesses:
·
BookSlut (was a book review site)
·
BookBitch (book review site)
·
Bad Bitch Book Club
·
Book Bitch (etsy)
· Book Gang (podcast)
Now, did Book Thug Press substantively change its name by merely substituting an asterisk for a letter? They replaced the T with an asterisk. Their name is essentially still Book Thug. Otherwise, they would really change it completely. Is this their way of caving in to the woke PC police but seeking refuge in an asterisk that affords them a chance to create a dialogue that gets to convey the name origin and defend what is behind it?
Here is something interesting. There is a bookstore in Brooklyn that goes by Book Thug Nation. God bless them for having some balls to stick by their name. The store opened in Williamsburg 15 years ago. No name change!
Everyone, of all colors, creeds, genders, faiths, and shapes, stand up to the bullies who seek to bastardize language for their own gain. Words matter and no political agenda can change that fact. Stand up to PC thugs!
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