Howard's script avoids the " n-word, " but blacks are referred to as " darkies " and " inferiors ."
42.
I expected to find a squalid Southern village, with darkies snoozing on the horse-blocks, pigs rooting under the houses and the inhabitants full of hookworm and malaria.
43.
In " The Delectable Duchy "'Q'( the writer Arthur Quiller-Couch ) tells of mummers, guise-dancers and darky parties in c1892.
44.
Even Bickham's lawyer at the time, who never put his client on the stand, refers to Bickham as " a darky on a Saturday night ."
45.
When the league folded in December 1990, six teams continued for the next season, at the highest level of South African football, known as Manning Rangers, Dangerous Darkies.
46.
A different set of family values was imparted by Leyden's grandfather, who would tell his grandchildren, " We don't bring darkies into this home ."
47.
Robert Colescott ironically replaced the solemn peasants in van Gogh's " Potato Eaters " with " happy darkies " in his 1975 " Eat Dem Taters ."
48.
Prime minister John Key and sports minister Murray McCully said both Haden and Holmes used the word " darkies " in similarly offensive ways, and the public needed to forgive them in similar ways.
49.
Edward Said argues that Naipaul " allowed himself quite consciously to be turned into a witness for the Western prosecution ", promoting what Said classifies as " colonial mythologies about wogs and darkies ".
50.
For decades, darky images had been seen in the branding of everyday products and commodities such as " Nigger Hair Tobacco, Darkie toothpaste ( renamed Darlie ), and Blackman mops in Thailand.