Skip to main content

Welsh Exam Board removes classic novel due to racial slurs

By January 12, 2025News

The Welsh exam board, WJEC, have removed the classic American novel, Of Mice and Men, from their set text list amid concerns regarding racial slurs in the book. Of Mice and Men will no longer be studied at GCSE level in Wales from September due to concerns regarding the harm that could potentially be caused by its inclusion on the syllabus for English Language and Literature. Instead, the WJEC exam board said it had chosen “a wide range” of “appropriate and inclusive texts”.

John Steinbeck’s 1930s novel set in California during the Great Depression is currently only one of five options offered to schools as part of a unit in the WJEC’s English Literature GCSE. The novel has already been dropped by a major exam board in England from 2014 following the then Education Secretary Michael Gove’s call for more British works to be studied in schools.

Wales’ Children’s Commissioner, Rocio Cifuentes, welcomed the move explaining that many Black children had “specifically mentioned this text and the harm that it caused them” when questioned as part of research on racism in secondary schools.

Cifuentes added: “It’s not censorship. This is safeguarding the wellbeing of children who have told us how awful those discussions have made them feel in those classrooms. They’ve very often been the only black child in that classroom when discussions all around them are focusing on very derogatory, negative depictions of Black people.”

Shel Silverstein: The Poet Who Wrote Your Favourite Songs

| Authors, News | No Comments
Most people know Shel Silverstein as the quirky genius behind The Giving Tree, Where the Sidewalk Ends, and A Light in the Attic. His playful poetry and doodle-like illustrations made…

New stage adaptation of Austen’s Emma brings the novel into 21st Century

| Adaptations, News, The Classics | No Comments
In the year we celebrate the 250th anniversary of celebrated British novelist, Jane Austen, her 1815 novel, Emma is getting a modern re-telling in a new stage adaptation from Ava…

Carol Ann Duffy writes scathing poem about Trump’s UK visit

| News, Poetry, Political | No Comments
Former poet laureate, Carol Ann Duffy, has penned a new poem entitled ‘STATE/BANQUET’ in response to U.S. President, Donald Trump’s recent UK state visit; the first U.S. President to receive…

Word of the Day – Verdant

| News, Word of the Day | No Comments
Word of the Day - Verdant (adj) vur-dent

Pioneering 91-year-old lesbian author wins inaugural prize launched by Bernardine Evaristo

| News | No Comments
91-year-old author, Maureen Duffy has won the inaugural Pioneer Prize, a literary award for women over 60. The RSL Pioneer Prize is administered by the Royal Society of Literature and…

New illustrated edition of children’s classic, The Velveteen Rabbit, to be published

| Children's Literature, New Releases, News | No Comments
Scholastic UK has announced the upcoming publication of a new illustrated edition of the much-loved children’s classic, The Velveteen Rabbit. The full-colour edition of the book will vividly bring to…

The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists and Why It Still Matters

| Literature, News, Political, Reading Excerpts, Reading Habits | No Comments
By Nicky Blewitt When I first picked up The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists in 1985, I’ll admit—I was braced for a slog. It’s got one of those titles that sounds like…

Margaret Atwood pens short story firing a satirical short at Canadian book ban

| News | No Comments
Canadian writer, Margaret Atwood – best known for her novel, The Handmaid’s Tale - has released a new short story in response to her novel being removed from some bookshelves…

André Aciman’s queer modern classic, Call Me By Your Name, to get graphic novel adaptation

| News | No Comments
Faber have announced the upcoming publication of Call Me By Your Name: The Graphic Novel, an adaptation of the million-copy bestselling modern classic by André Aciman. First published in 2007,…