[June 30th
marks the 80th anniversary of the initial publication of one of the
20th century’s bestselling novels, Margaret
Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind
(1936). So this week I’ll offer a handful of thoughts on the book and its
legacies, as well as some of the broader issues to which it connects.]
On the problems
and possibilities presented by troubling popular art.
A few years
back, I started a week-long
series on popular fiction with a
post on the continued relevance of Jane Tompkins’ scholarly concept of the
“cultural work” done by 19th century popular novels. As I noted
there, Tompkins sought to revise and expand the literary canon as it had been
developed over the prior half-century of criticism by redefining “greatness,”
focusing not on intrinsic aesthetic qualities or successes so much as texts’
extrinsic social and cultural effects. Her most central example was the 19th
century’s bestselling American novel, Harriet Beecher Stowe’s
Uncle Tom’s Cabin, a book that
exemplifies cultural work, having impacted American society
(in its own moment and for the century and a half that has followed) on
countless levels. If we were to apply the same lens and argument to 20th
century American literature, it’d be difficult to make the case for another
work having been more popular and successful—and thus, at least potentially,
having had a wider and more significant set of effects, in its own moment and
in subsequent decades—than Gone with the
Wind.
Yet as my posts
this week have illustrated, from the perspective of either progressive
political beliefs or a multicultural definition of American identity Mitchell’s
novel did far different, and far more destructive, cultural work than did
Stowe’s (which was itself, to be clear, far from perfect on
issues of race and culture, but still significantly better-intentioned than
Mitchell’s book). So what do us public AmericanStudies scholars do with that
sort of popular fiction, one where the popularity and appeals and legacy are
impossible to separate from cultural work that we’d spend a career resisting
and challenging? The easy but (to my mind) unacceptable answer would be to
argue that Mitchell’s novel (and/or the just as popular film adaptation) should
be, not censored entirely, but less frequently read or viewed, that its
continued cultural presence should be minimized. Yet even if that weren’t a
deeply problematic thing to argue (and I would say that it is, one that’s much
too close to censorship for my liking), I don’t believe it would lead in our
current society to collective conversation or understandings. Instead, public
scholars arguing that something shouldn’t be read as much seems guaranteed
simply to put it on a required reading list for those individuals and
communities who feel themselves opposed to our perspectives.
So if we accept
that Mitchell’s compelling and enduring novel will continue to be read, what
then? We could of course make the case for other texts that complement and
complicate her novel, although the two contemporary works that I would particularly
highlight—W.E.B.
Du Bois’ Black Reconstruction in America
(1935) and William
Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom! (1936)—are about as far from
page-turning bestsellers as books can get. But in any case, it’d be even more important
to talk collectively, as I’ve tried to model in individual ways this week,
about Gone with the Wind itself—about
its strengths as well its flaws, about why and how it has endured as well as
what mythic and troubling narratives it has reflected and perpetuated, about
what it means to love a work of art and how even (indeed, especially) when we
do it’s important to be able to
be analytical and critical about it. I believe those are conversations we
can all take part in, ones that parallel the best kinds of classroom
discussions, and ones through which we can help a popular work like Gone with the Wind move into its ninth
decade in a meaningful as well as pleasurable way.
June recap this
weekend,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Memories or perspectives on Gone with the Wind you’d share?
No comments:
Post a Comment