Initially I thought she was the only
character who wasn't growing, actually digressing. But by the end she does grow
up. In no regard is this greater than in her eventual desire to be a mother.
Turning from her ravenous post-war desire to survive to her acceptance of life
and the people around her as the way they are, eventually Scarlett grows into
the person she was meant to be. As did the South. Prideful and resentful,
eventually they had to accept that they lost the war and take what was given
them and try to make it work.
2013年6月30日日曜日
2013年6月23日日曜日
Gone with the Wind⑩
Oh Scarlett. We all know people like her. People
who unscrupulously use their womanly charms to get ahead and carry a deep
disdain for those bound by concepts of kindness, morals, or intelligence and
most especially for those who see them for what they are instead of being
manipulated. People who care for nobody but themselves and who find enjoyment
in life not in what they have, but in conquering the unattainable that is only
desirable because it is out of reach. I loved how Mitchell showed Scarlett's
decline from a religious albeit not believing girl who allowed her
rationalization and avoidance to carry her from one sin to the next of
intensifying degree. An excellent portrait of the degradation of character.
2013年6月16日日曜日
Gone with the Wind⑨
I view Scarlett as a representation of the South in
which she loved. She did not care from whence the wealth came or believed that
it would ever end. Because she was rich and important, she would conquer. As
the Yankees attempted to rebuild the South, fresh in their embitterment at a
war they did not want to fight, you can both see their reasoning and feel for
the Southerners who were licked and then stomped on in their attempts to gain
back of their life. You see that in Scarlett. On one hand you don't pity her
and think she needs a lesson in poverty and on the other hand you want her to
survive. Either she can lie down and cling to her old ways or she can debase
herself and rebuild. Survival, not morality, is her strongest drive.
2013年6月9日日曜日
Gone with the Wind⑧
My one complaint about the book was at times the
description was lengthy. I'd get a grasp for the emotions of Scarlett that are
supposed to describe the emotions of all Southerners or the description of the
land at Tara as a representation of the rich red soil all Southerners love and
then Mitchell would go on for paragraphs or pages rehashing that feeling to
pull the most emotion out of you. It worked, but sometimes I think she could
have done so in fewer words.
2013年6月2日日曜日
Gone with the Wind⑦
I also enjoyed Mitchell showing the volatile
formula in which the KKK was aroused, that it wasn't just a disdain for free
darkies but a need to protect their women and children from the rash anger now
imposed on them through this new regime. Not that there are any redeeming
qualities in the KKK, or even the Southern rash justice by pistol shot to curb
wounded pride, but it was interesting to learn the wider circumstances in which
it arose. The entire picture of the Southern perspective from the hierarchy of
slaves to the disdain of the reconstruction was enlightening. The post-war
difficulties, that sometimes it's harder to survive than die, were some of my
favorite epiphanies of the story. What everyone in the South went through, both
white and black, after everything was deconstructed and they didn't know how to
rebuild. It wasn't just about freeing slaves but about rebuilding an entire way
of life and sometimes change, even good change, can be this scary and
destructive.
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