Why Roald Dahl Does Not Deserve a Second Chance

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By Ashlie Swicker for Book Riot, 14 Apr 2023

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Roald Dahl’s books are being edited to make them less offensive. Joke is, nothing has really changed. No matter how many tweaks are made to try and push classics like Charlie and the Chocolate Factory into more politically correct territory, Dahl’s books are still harmful. There are a number of things that make defending Roald Dahl a questionable move, but I’d like to address the way his books reinforce stereotypes about physical attractiveness. Dahl wasn’t creative enough to make his antagonists’ actions reveal their character, and his shortcuts in using negative physical descriptions as a stand-in for actual development have damaged generations of readers.

Dahl’s books repeatedly describe villainous characters as ugly and fat, but he doesn’t stop there. He describes clothes as tight as sausage casings, rolls of flesh bulging. He talks about bottle-dyed hair and caked-on makeup and wrinkles and hairy upper lips and moles with obvious disgust. Through his descriptions of antagonists, and especially as they’re placed against the lithe, lovely descriptions of his heroes, Dahl sends a clear message that a person’s physical descriptions will match the way they act.

The result is two-fold: there is a good way to look and a bad way to look, and if you look bad, you are bad. I can hear eye rolls from here. I know that people will be on the defensive, insisting that I am oversimplifying. It’s okay to be wrong. Yes, I’ve read his quote about thinking good thoughts and they’ll shine out of your face like sunbeams and make you lovely no matter what you look like. It’s crap and does not match the way he wrote characters throughout his entire career.

The hilarious part is, fat is not a bad word, and changing it in his books won’t remove the spirit of what he was saying. Calling Augustus Gloop “enormous” instead of “fat” doesn’t correct the massive (pun intended) inaccuracy that fat people are greedy. He is literally using an overweight child as a caricature of avarice. No big deal, except that in 2023 people are winning Oscars for putting Brendan Fraiser in a fat suit so he can cry while he shoves food into his mouth. These disgusting tropes about fat people are continued to this day, and I am positive that depictions like this in children’s literature are part of the problem.

Changing a word here and there does not change the fact that Dahl meant what he said when he wrote these books. He happily perpetuated the idea that physical attractiveness and body size are reliable measures that can be used to determine the character of a person. Not a single Dahl story that we hold dear is worth the damage that these ideas can cause to people of every size. Edited or not, these books are not worth saving.

One of the most damaging things about Dahl’s work is the audience he intended to reach: children between the ages of 8 and 12. This is a crucial in our character development when many of our ideas about the world are being solidified. Input from family, friends, school communities, television, and, yes, books are huge parts of how we decide what our values are and how we will view the world around us. Stop and consider the way a body of work that continuously disparages fat and ugly people would affect a person reading those books at age nine. Now consider that these books are held up by all as a paragon of storytelling magic. It’s not (again, pun intended) pretty.

It was very clear to this homely, overweight, book-obsessed girl in the ’90s that I did not match the descriptions of Dahl’s heroes. In the same sentences that laid out the greed, stupidity, or selfishness of villains, physical descriptions included all the things I was scared people would say about me: large thighs, multiple chins, clothes bursting around bodies that were simply too big. If you read this enough, you absolutely start to believe it. Flashy reality shows and music videos sent a message that I should look a certain way, and it might have been easier to overcome if the revered children’s literature being pressed into my hand didn’t back that up with a vengeance.

The move to sanitize Roald Dahl’s books does nothing to change the harm that his words can impart. Why is there such a push to rehabilitate his damaged body of work? Librarians and booksellers are working overtime to highlight books that are inclusive and uplifting, and we don’t have to sacrifice a scrap of magical storytelling to find titles that fit the bill. The good books are out there!
This will obviously leave crusty old ones like Dahl in the dust, and that’s okay. In the end, it’s about protecting the name of an antisemitic jerk who wrote weak character descriptions because he wasn’t talented enough to write complex villains or multidimensional heroes. It’s like praising Seuss for his rhyming when he made up half the words. There is so much better out there, and Roald Dahl does not deserve a second chance.

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Ashlie (she/her) is an educator, librarian, and writer. She is committed to diversifying the reading lives of her students and supporting fat acceptance as it intersects with other women’s issues. She's also perpetually striving to learn more about how she can use her many privileges to support marginalized groups. Interests include learning how to roller skate with her local roller derby team, buying more books than she'll ever read, hiking with her husband and sons, and making lists to avoid real work. You can find her on Instagram (@ashlieelizabeth), Twitter (@mygirlsimple) or at her website, www.ashlieswicker.com.
 
Roald Dahl is right about fat people. They are vile and disgusting individuals who's problems are 100% self caused.
Gluttony is a capital sin for a reason. Aside from people with an actual conditions that don't let them lose weight, most fat people are actually obese and they caused this on their own and have no plans on changing their lives for the better, they don't care. This is the attitude they go through life with: I fucked up, but it's up to you to deal with it, not me. Of course we feel repulsed, it's like a natural response.
 
Why Roald Dahl Does Not Deserve a Second Chance
Were they planning to resurrect this motherfucker before they decided his works were problematic? He already had his "chance" and died old, rich, celebrated and surrounded by family.

I'm not even going to read the article as the headline is too fucking stupid and I already know where it's going (nowhere)
 
This persistent inability of so-called 'educated adults' to see works of fiction in the context and cultural time they were written drives me fucking insane. Yes, in the last three or four decades many people have become overweight because they are taking medication, or are too poor/work too many hours to access and prepare healthy food. But when Dahl wrote his books, the only people in the world who were overweight were people who ate more than their fair share out of sheer selfish gluttony, and up until the 1970s, food shortages still existed. Dahl went through two world wars and the Great Depression! Not knowing if there would be food on the table at dinnertime, or even for the rest of the week, was a thing that almost everyone in Western countries faced. If someone is fat in a world where everyone else is struggling to find food to put in their children's mouths, they will be judged and judged harshly.

These people who spend all their time whining about 'privilege' are invariably spoiled, narcissistic twats. The amount of noise they make is always inversely proportional to how disconnected they are from basic reality.
 
Roald Dahl wrote so vividly that none of the film adaptations have truly done his work justice.

Meanwhile this twit still takes myspace angle selfies.

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She looks like she's in her 60s. But she claims to be a girl in the 90s. My guess? She's bitter she never got a golden ticket.
 
Next they'll change "Piggy" in "Lord Of The Flies" to "Twiggy", have him/her be a svelte bitch who offers his/her ass to everyone on the island for coconuts.
Please don't give these morons ideas...

That said, I'll be surprised if Lord of the Flies gets such a mild rewrite. The boys are creating a society free from capitalism and the Patriarchy and heterosexuality, based on equality and anarchist principles. In the remake they'll be perfect socialists in a model co-operative society and they'll all be polyamourous and genderfluid. They'll also not be boys, or Caucasian, and certainly not British. They'll all be African American teenage girls, plus one troon.
 
These people who spend all their time whining about 'privilege' are invariably spoiled, narcissistic twats.
That's the biggest irony of all this social justice bullshit. They whine about privilege, yet that's exactly what they're fighting for. They don't care about rights and liberties. They just want certain groups of people to receive preferential treatment with few or no consequences for their actions.

People like this cuntface writer also reinforce why we must do whatever we can to protect and preserve all that we can. In other words, archive IRL every chance you get!
 
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