themselves, mentioned in the text about a hundred times, were replaced by soldiers, and the negretesland was renamed soldiers, but this happened already in 2020, and mark twain inherited it. in the second half of the 20th century, his novel, the adventures of huckleberry fin, began to be severely persecuted. it's all about expanding the boundaries of the same politically correct word negro, mentioned in the novel more than 200 times, the works began to be removed from reading programs in all states. in this particular case, the problem is the word itself. people don't come and they don't say, but we can't teach from this book. because it discusses slavery, they say, we can't teach from this book because it has all these repeated instances of the offensive n-word, therefore we're not going to use it. it was williams' publishing house that released a misunderstanding-free version of the classic in 2011. in the new edition, the word negro was everywhere replaced by rap, and the children's writer was not lucky enough to end up in the millstone of censorship. most of us are familiar with