Re: A great loss

Big fan on both the book and the movie. I had a similar upbringing in the Fifties.
I've been saying this for years, so that makes it the truth in my neck of the woods: Scout isn't a fictitional character. Scout is Harper Lee, and Dill, the runt, is Truman Capote. They grew up in the same Georgia neighborhood. Rumor has it that Capote wrote the book for his childhood friend--but I chose not to believe it. For me the power of Harper Lee's voice is what makes TKAM one of my favorite stories.

Re: A great loss

Nathan B. Childs wrote:

Big fan on both the book and the movie. I had a similar upbringing in the Fifties.
I've been saying this for years, so that makes it the truth in my neck of the woods: Scout isn't a fictitional character. Scout is Harper Lee, and Dill, the runt, is Truman Capote. They grew up in the same Georgia neighborhood. Rumor has it that Capote wrote the book for his childhood friend--but I chose not to believe it. For me the power of Harper Lee's voice is what makes TKAM one of my favorite stories.

Wish we had a like button. I just never thought I'd cause such a stir just by acknowledging the woman's passing.

Re: A great loss

Dill Carver wrote:

Looks like a decent pros and cons argument here from a teacher;

https://goodbyteaching.wordpress.com/20 … nt-page-1/

I'm reading a bit about To Kill a Mocking Bird, here and online. I have read Memphis Trace's comments upon the disparity between reading the novel as a younger person and then re-reading as a mature adult.

I guess I was 13 or 14yrs old when I read it. That's a good while ago (a distant memory) and I think I should re-read it now to update my opinion.

I appreciate your citing the teacher's reasons for and against including To Kill a Mockingbird in a curriculum.

It was never part of a curriculum for me, so my calling it my favorite story for 40 years was based on what I gleaned from it at about 25 years old. Compared to Faulkner and other less accessible writers, some of the appeal to me was in how easily I became immersed in the story. Some of that could have been because Lee wrote characters that were cliches for the time. I had no real way of telling at the time whether there were such heroic figures as Atticus fighting racism in the small towns in the South.

You, at half my age, and with the passage of history, were probably more grounded in whether Lee's Atticus was believable or a puppet to satisfy her agenda.

Because it was accessible, and I entered the world Lee created with suspended disbelief, and I lived in a world she was writing about, I was deeply moved and inspired by it.

When I went back to To Kill a Mockingbird, having experienced 40 years of reading literature and leading my life, Atticus did seem like a puppet for Lee's agenda, but I still couldn't help reading the whole story without scrutinizing the writing. I was glad to get Lee's Go Set a Watchman about 5 years later. Go Set a Watchman told me that Scout did not know Atticus was a closet racist. And it told me that Atticus was beyond heroic in convincing Scout and the world in To Kill a Mockingbird that he was an enlightened champion for civil rights. In Go Set a Watchman, Lee undressed Atticus.

After you've read To Kill a Mockingbird again, I'd love to hear whether you think Lee redeemed the story To Kill a Mockingbird with Go Set a Watchman. I am more interested in your view of Lee's storytelling than I am interested in your view of her prose. Is the prose so flat and the voice so unappealing that you want to throw the book into the hedges?

Faulkner said, "The aim of every artist is to arrest motion, which is life, by artificial means and hold it fixed so that a hundred years later, when a stranger looks at it, it moves again."

I'd love to know if the story, not the artificial means Lee used to arrest it, moves for you as a reader who wasn't forced to read it.

Memphis

Re: A great loss

njc wrote:

Spot and correct the error, or be liable for "fifty lashes with a wet noodle."

Toe the line?

55 (edited by corra 2016-03-01 15:21:50)

Re: A great loss

Nathan B. Childs wrote:

They grew up in the same Georgia neighborhood...

I often have Georgia on my mind, too. However, Lee grew up in Alabama, I think. Truman Capote was her neighbor. wink

(I've read Capote's Christmas stories about his friendship with Miss Sook while in Alabama. Quite lovely.) x

56

Re: A great loss

corra wrote:
njc wrote:

Spot and correct the error, or be liable for "fifty lashes with a wet noodle."

Toe the line?

Got it in one!

Re: A great loss

njc wrote:
corra wrote:
njc wrote:

Spot and correct the error, or be liable for "fifty lashes with a wet noodle."

Toe the line?

Got it in one!

I thought Dill was using a hybrid of "Tow the barge, walk the line."

Memphis

Re: A great loss

Janet Taylor-Perry wrote:

I just never thought I'd cause such a stir just by acknowledging the woman's passing.

Are you new here? wink

Re: A great loss

Memphis Trace wrote:

It has voice for sure. And I suspect that the reason it immersed me twice is because it doesn't call attention to its grit and soul with soulful prose... I won't demean Lee's hard work at this by saying 'tis a gift to be simple, because I have a vague idea now after 57 years of trying to write soulful prose just how difficult it is to make a hard job look simple to be accessible to interested readers.

Well said.

Re: A great loss

Memphis Trace wrote:
njc wrote:
corra wrote:

Toe the line?

Got it in one!

I thought Dill was using a hybrid of "Tow the barge, walk the line."

Memphis

You can take that to the bank and smoke it. I tend to burn bridges as I come to them. Putting the idiot into idiom, I was probably three sheep to the wind when I wrote that.

Re: A great loss

Mad as a cobbler! cool

Re: A great loss

corra wrote:
Janet Taylor-Perry wrote:

I just never thought I'd cause such a stir just by acknowledging the woman's passing.

Are you new here? wink

Nope. I just don't comment very often in these threads. I prefer to read them and let others pick one another apart. It just never ceases to amaze me how something innocent spirals into craziness. Sometimes it makes me laugh; other times, I want to cry. And then the occasional spark of genius, just keeps me reading more.

Re: A great loss

Nathan B. Childs wrote:

Big fan on both the book and the movie. I had a similar upbringing in the Fifties.
I've been saying this for years, so that makes it the truth in my neck of the woods: Scout isn't a fictitional character. Scout is Harper Lee, and Dill, the runt, is Truman Capote. They grew up in the same Georgia neighborhood. Rumor has it that Capote wrote the book for his childhood friend--but I chose not to believe it. For me the power of Harper Lee's voice is what makes TKAM one of my favorite stories.

Oops! I was one state off;) Thanks for the heads-up, corra. Another fun rumor is that Harper Lee helped Capote research In Cold Blood.

64 (edited by Dill Carver 2016-03-02 18:44:55)

Re: A great loss

One of the Amazon reviews of 'To Kill a Mockingbird' pretty much sums up the way I felt about it when I read it. This is a bit more vociferous than I'd have put it, but I can relate in essence to the criticisms this reviewer expresses.

(Not my words - A review from Amazon)

This is not great literature, and I avoid teaching it at all costs. It’s not even good. The characters are black and white two-dimensional cardboard cutouts. The rednecks are evil, the blacks are victims, and the self-righteous Atticus is too good to be true. There is nothing here to examine or explore. Critical thinking skills need not be applied for understanding. Moreover, if the lack of complexity and verisimilitude doesn’t stick in your craw, then the insipid narration of the androgynous Scout will. This novel is popular due, in part, to the fact that the reader can feel morally superior to white trailor trash as he identifies with the demigod, Atticus. Shakespeare, the consummate craftsmen of characterization, understood that even the evil (save Iago) have some redeeming qualities, and the good flaws. To Kill a Mockingbird is about as deep as a rain puddle.

SOURCE
http://www.cynical-c.com/2009/03/18/you … ckingbird/ 

I read the book many years ago as a young teenager and yes, it stuck in my craw (or should I say claw for the delight of the noodle thrashers?)

I'm re-reading again, now as an immature adult and I have to say that straight away the tense throws me. It is a kind of first person in retrospect that swirls in and out of past and present tense using the remembrance as a device to introduce omniscience into the first person.

65 (edited by Memphis Trace 2016-03-02 18:15:26)

Re: A great loss

Nathan B. Childs wrote:
Nathan B. Childs wrote:

Big fan on both the book and the movie. I had a similar upbringing in the Fifties.
I've been saying this for years, so that makes it the truth in my neck of the woods: Scout isn't a fictitional character. Scout is Harper Lee, and Dill, the runt, is Truman Capote. They grew up in the same Georgia neighborhood. Rumor has it that Capote wrote the book for his childhood friend--but I chose not to believe it. For me the power of Harper Lee's voice is what makes TKAM one of my favorite stories.

Oops! I was one state off;) Thanks for the heads-up, corra. Another fun rumor is that Harper Lee helped Capote research In Cold Blood.

Capote acknowledged Lee's assistance: https://dspace.iup.edu/handle/2069/757 But apparently not as much as she deserved.

Abstract:
Throughout the publication and promotion of Truman Capote's In Cold Blood, Capote admitted his childhood friend, Harper Lee, accompanied him to Kansas as his research assistant, but he never explained in detail what she did to assist him other than to say she accompanied him on interviews. However, once the book was published, her name never appeared in the acknowledgement page of the book. Capote allowed people to believe that Lee was only in Kansas with him two months and she never returned during the five years he was there to conduct research. It is true that Lee was in Kansas the first few months with Capote; however, she returned to assist him with research at Hickock's and Smith's arraignment, and she returned to Kansas many other times. However, Capote never revealed this information or Lee's major role in the research for In Cold Blood. It was not until the publication of Charles Shields' unauthorized biography of Lee, Mockingbird (2006), the world began to understand Lee's research conducted for In Cold Blood. Shields briefly showed several passages of Lee's notes in one chapter, "See N.L.'s Notes." However, what Shields revealed was only a small part of Lee contributions. By conducting archival research at the New York Public Library and the Library of Congress, and by conducting interviews with people who knew Capote and Lee, I have discovered Lee's exact contributions to Capote's research.
By examining Lee's and Capote's research notes, and by juxtaposing both of the writers' notes, one can see that Lee conducted a majority of the interviews with the townspeople, while Capote focused primarily on Smith and Hickock. This dissertation explores both writers' research note and shows what notes Lee recorded were used in Capote's published book. Their notes not only reveal what research they conducted, but also reveal their personalities and show that the two had major creative differences. This dissertation also suggests possible theories as to why Capote did not acknowledge Lee, because he suffered from narcissism. Because Capote did not acknowledge Lee properly, I suggest that this is one reason Lee stopped writing.

Memphis

Re: A great loss

j p lundstrom wrote:

A respectful pause for the death of a gifted human being.

.....I'd wager a guess that it even seems condescending to some people. How insulting in modern times to say that a whole race is unable to solve their problems without the benevolence of one white man!

Condescending indeed.

A quote from the text....


“Atticus says cheatin‘ a colored man is ten times worse than cheatin’ a white man,” I muttered. “Says it’s the worst thing you can do.”

Condescending, patronizing, discriminatory, elitist, demeaning, superior, belittling, downright hypocritical from the man who also spouts that all men should be treated equally. The very opposite of equality, Atticus treats a colored man with condescension but is so self-absorbed that he thinks it kindness.

This book is making me squirm on several levels.

67

Re: A great loss

Dill Carver wrote:

I read the book many years ago as a young teenager and yes, it stuck in my craw (or should I say claw for the delight of the noodle thrashers?)

No, for the wet-noodle lasher you should definitely write ''craw', unless you mean to provoke a flaccid pasta flurry.

Re: A great loss

Dill Carver wrote:
j p lundstrom wrote:

A respectful pause for the death of a gifted human being.

.....I'd wager a guess that it even seems condescending to some people. How insulting in modern times to say that a whole race is unable to solve their problems without the benevolence of one white man!

Condescending indeed.

A quote from the text....


“Atticus says cheatin‘ a colored man is ten times worse than cheatin’ a white man,” I muttered. “Says it’s the worst thing you can do.”

Condescending, patronizing, discriminatory, elitist, demeaning, superior, belittling, downright hypocritical from the man who also spouts that all men should be treated equally. The very opposite of equality, Atticus treats a colored man with condescension but is so self-absorbed that he thinks it kindness.

This book is making me squirm on several levels.

How is it any of those things?

Memphis

69 (edited by Dill Carver 2016-03-03 14:30:58)

Re: A great loss

Memphis Trace wrote:

How is it any of those things?

How is it not any of those things?

Interpretation translated into a personal opinion, I suppose.

In my opinion it is akin to a 'carer' saying 'Be kind to the little retard children. Remember the poor little dumb souls don't know they are a dribblin' so.'

Atticus's statement indicates that the originators sentiment is that “a white man” is a factor of ten times superior or more advantaged compared to the “colored folk”. Whether that be in terms of vulnerability, susceptibility, intelligence, privilege or whatever. It is an elitist and condescending mind-set.

“Atticus says cheatin‘ a colored man is ten times worse than cheatin’ a white man,” I muttered. “Says it’s the worst thing you can do.”

In my opinion (interpretation) it is a statement of pure bigotry but not from the mouth of a bigot character but from the mouth and mind of the supposedly un-bigoted character. It is scary because it shows the racism is inherent and deeply engrained or institutionalised and it shows that at his core Atticus is a racist and doesn’t even know it. In terms of the novel it a least gives the Atticus character some depth. Without it he is just a sounding board for ‘stock’ noble mantras.

I know this was written in the 60’s but I find it hard not to relate to the day-to-day and subliminally put this in the context of say, the white man, Hilary Clinton and the black man, Barak Obama and the solemn directive that one is ten times more superior to the other on account of skin tone and ancestory.

To me it seems that the statement is based purely upon the perspective of racial denominations and nothing else. The racist’s automatic, fundamental belief that an illiterate “white man” farm-hand of low IQ is ten times superior to the “black man” brain-surgeon purely upon the basis of their ethnicity. Essentially, to me, this is saying that one of those pair is a more important human being than the other.

I can’t read this book; I have neither the time nor the spirit. I’m half-way into the re-read but I’m done. If it were a paperback rather than a free-to-read pdf, it’d be lobbed it into a hedge to join my first copy of this dirge.

In my opinion the first few chapters are sort of okay, but it degenerates after that.

Sorry. No hard feelings; horses for courses and all that. It is simply not my bag. To me it reads as a shallow sounding board for anti-racism mantras. It is as an appealing piece of literature to me, as say a Mills & Bloom or Harlequin novel where the romance premise is swapped for a racisim premise.

In terms of a story I think the author should have had Maudie Atkinson murdered and Tom Robinson accused.  Much more of a whodunit with more depth and meat upon the bones.

But that’s just me. I love Dicken’s ‘A tale of Two Cities’ but others hate it. I really like ‘Gone with the Wind’ but plenty decry the novel. I am a great enthusiast of the novels of John le Carré and many of his titles are beloved to me, but there is a huge amount of readers who simply cannot stand his writing. Japanese eat dolphin and whale, the Koreans eat dog. Marilyn Manson and Slipknot are to some, as Beethoven and Bach are to others. An episode of ‘The Walton’s’ will make some viewers feel emotionally warm and glowing and others will be left with a splash of vomit in their mouths.

Preference and interpretation, we are all different, we all like different stuff. We all dislike different stuff. Likers like and haters hate.

I don’t like ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ and that is from my gut. Like a spoonful of dolphin soup it is distasteful to me.  Sorry, it just is what it is. The prose simply does not fly in my mind, it does not engage me, my attention wanders, I lose focus and become  bored.

Apparently, there is a movie and I might try that in order to see how the story and prose translates from the page into a script with actors and orators.

Anyway, I’m moving on from this conversation; this novel because I have nothing of value to add. I’m glad that ‘To Kill a Mocking Bird’ exists, I feel that it adds to the rich tableau of Literature and I think this community has held a splendid conversation upon the novel and I’m richer for that. I fully respect anyone who likes or loves the the novel but I’ve discovered (or confirmed) that I really don’t like it.

As much as I don’t like the novel, I do respect the success it has achieved and I also acknowledge the joy it has bought to so many people. I would also like to express my respect for the author Harper Lee and my condolences to her family and friends.

Cheers! Dill

70

Re: A great loss

The reason it's worse to cheat a colored man IN THAT WORLD is that the colored man is already cheated, is denied the ability to fight back, and is regarded as automatically guity.

That's not condescension, though it would be today in most places.  That's basic 'don't hit a man when he's down'.

71 (edited by Dill Carver 2016-03-03 16:53:27)

Re: A great loss

njc wrote:

The reason it's worse to cheat a colored man IN THAT WORLD is that the colored man is already cheated, is denied the ability to fight back, and is regarded as automatically guity.

That's not condescension, though it would be today in most places.  That's basic 'don't hit a man when he's down'.


Don't hit a man when he's down? If only it were as unilateral as that in its basis.

The way I read it is that race is a consideration. Poor white trash being just as disadvantaged as black men, but assuming they are ten times better on account of their skin. A race apart.

Don't hit a man when he's down, implies (as it should) that a man is a man with no distinction between race or ethnicity.

Although what Lee is showing us through Atticus and her novel in general is that a man is not considered a man, he is (naturally) considered either a white man or a black man. It is her premise.

To make the distinction that there are two types of men (two different races) is of course racist in essence, but the shock to the reader is the automatic distinction between white and black is carried like an instinct in the liberal Atticus who probably considers himself non-racist.

I find it strange to be honest because Finch is not from the Southern American Slavery/Plantation linage (where racism would be inherent). Much is made in the outset of the novel of his forebear, the Methodist Simon Finch, from Cornwall England.

I know the novel is set "IN THAT WORLD" but it still makes my shit itch.

.... And as much as I don't like to wet-noodle thrash a man when he's down, I find you "guity" as charged.

72 (edited by njc 2016-03-03 18:56:10)

Re: A great loss

Finch is taking the world as he finds it, not as it ought to be.  But he's trying to make it at it ought to be, a world where nobody kills that mockingbird.

Doesn't this very discussion show that =To Kill a Mockingbird= is worthy of discussion?

73 (edited by corra 2016-03-03 18:59:33)

Re: A great loss

Hey! No need to mock The Waltons!

The following offered is with respect to your point of view, Dill, and appreciation of your honesty! And also with a nod to your inclination to chuck the book and bow out of this conversation. You've said how you feel, and I understand you prefer not to belabor it. However, since I've just seen this, I'll tuck in a note on my thoughts, with no expectation that you'll continue to discuss it. I'm also quite busy and feel I've been only half-here. Sorry! Good conversation!! smile

I find it strange to be honest because Finch is not from the Southern American Slavery/Plantation linage (where racism would be inherent). Much is made in the outset of the novel of his forebear, the Methodist Simon Finch, from Cornwall England.

I may be misunderstanding something, but are you suggesting racism was only a part of the plantation culture in the American South? The plantation system was the economic center of the South in its day, and cannot be considered some culture removed from the rest of the region. Racism was inherent and inherited all over the South. And the North, actually. I'm talking the blatant kind (which, I'm afraid, was all too common), as well as the implicit kind, such as the racism you sense in Atticus's remarks. Abolitionists were considered radicals in the North. This was not a plantation philosophy.

I love Margaret Mitchell (and like her!), but she says some questionable things in her letters which she'd have had no clue were offensive. Because she was from the 1930s in the Jim Crow South. Like my grandmother (raised in Georgia), who wouldn't have hurt a fly, but said some things upon moving North which made my grandfather roll up the car windows and shout at her to think before speaking. (I prefer not to repeat what she said, but it was intended as an innocent and even fond remark which was quite infantilizing.)

Simon Finch is reputed to be stingy (one can assume, also greedy) and cuts through Jamaica on his way to Alabama. He'd have seen the plantation system in full swing there. He buys three slaves and raises the Finches to follow. That's a racist foundation, and then some.

“Atticus says cheatin‘ a colored man is ten times worse than cheatin’ a white man,” I muttered. “Says it’s the worst thing you can do.”

Atticus isn't intended to be the mouthpiece of the novel, imho. His perspective is a foil to the Jim Crow philosophy which puts Tom Robinson on trial. He's a guy from the 1930s living in rural Alabama. He's not going to sound like someone from the 21st century. (I see you acknowledge that the book is set in the 1930s and you don't care because it's an ugly philosophy. Fair enough!)

Just to say though: To Kill a Mockingbird isn't Atticus's story. It's a coming of age tale about a little girl trying to form her philosophy as she watches the adults around her, as well as the children. Atticus's viewpoint is one within the periphery.

I keep pointing out the story's opening quote by Charles Lamb (epigraph) because I believe it's a signpost: this is a novel about the American children of the 1930s who will become the American adults of the 1960s -- those who were raised in a Jim Crow South who were coming of age just as the Civil Rights movement began and the book was published. The central child in the story is Scout, who is being raised in a world she must rise above. This world contains a great many injustices, beyond the Tom Robinson trial, which is the center injustice within the tale.

I guess I've said that a few times, so maybe my remarks are negligible, or maybe I'm speaking gibberish. smile

This is not great literature, and I avoid teaching it at all costs. It’s not even good. The characters are black and white two-dimensional cardboard cutouts. The rednecks are evil, the blacks are victims, and the self-righteous Atticus is too good to be true. There is nothing here to examine or explore. Critical thinking skills need not be applied for understanding. Moreover, if the lack of complexity and verisimilitude doesn’t stick in your craw, then the insipid narration of the androgynous Scout will. This novel is popular due, in part, to the fact that the reader can feel morally superior to white trailor trash as he identifies with the demigod, Atticus. Shakespeare, the consummate craftsmen of characterization, understood that even the evil (save Iago) have some redeeming qualities, and the good flaws. To Kill a Mockingbird is about as deep as a rain puddle.

I agree with this person's remarks on Shakespeare's villains, but I'm stunned that he overlooks one of the most complicated characters in this tale (Mayella). His reference to the "androgynous" Scout is particularly surprising, not because he points it out, but because he points it out as an apparent slam against her character which can be paired alongside "insipid." This is nothing but a person's knee-jerk inclination to believe that girls should behave like thus and thus, and since Scout doesn't, she's not only insipid but entirely genderless. That's not deep critical thinking?

All of which I point out because I searched him out and found his profile at Amazon (because he claimed in the review to teach English), and he holds a Masters in English, apparently?

Someone trained to study literature would know that the character's perspective is not synonymous with the author's, and would explore what is said beneath the surface. This guy would know that the depiction of "trailer trash" is through a child's viewpoint, and would contemplate the "why" behind this choice in perspective and its impact on the novel's theme. (Or its role as a signpost to the theme.)

Scout is having to pull herself out of a mindset that groups people according to labels like "trash" (I don't recall her ever using that phrase, but it's been a year and several books since I last read Mockingbird). The point is that somehow, against all odds, a little girl in Alabama in the 1930s is watching all of this, hearing perspectives, and speaks the line which makes this novel so famous (near the end of the book.)

Though people fixate on Atticus as the hero of the tale (I did the same on my first two reads), she is the one who reaches for Boo Radley's hand. She is the hero.

Anyway, I've loved / liked this conversation, Dill. smile I really appreciate your honesty and hope I haven't suggested otherwise in anything I've said. I've shared a few of my gut remarks on the novel between homework assignments, but I didn't revisit the book during this conversation, so my thoughts are a bit removed from the text. I really respect that you did revisit it. When I do reread, I'll be taking your point of view with me, because I value it, and because it sharpens my own perspective.

A hardy cheers and a few Waltons jeers! Best wishes for a better next book! x

74 (edited by Dill Carver 2016-03-03 19:26:22)

Re: A great loss

njc wrote:

Finch is taking the world as he finds it, not as it ought to be.

Well, I'd say that Atticus Finch is not taking the world as he finds it. He is very much trying to change the accepted ways and is highly opposed to the world as he finds it.

Finch is actually out of sorts with the world as he finds it. It is a major premise of the story and there are dozens of Atticus quotes within the text to back that up.

I think I may have been reading a different version of the novel. What I do know is that I don’t care much for the book and that’s that for me. I have long accepted that I’m on a different wave length and that most people will disagree with my point of view, whatever the subject. To Kill a Mocking Bird is the most popular book in the world that exists within many people’s minds. That’s fine and they are welcome to it. A MacDonald’s burger is the most popular meal. Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are people’s most popular people. To me, it’s so skewed and inverse that within my world I constantly feel that ‘I don’t get it?’ 

And I don’t.

75 (edited by Memphis Trace 2016-03-03 19:52:44)

Re: A great loss

Dill Carver wrote:
Memphis Trace wrote:

How is it any of those things?

How is it not any of those things?
I'll put those things here for easy referral as I offer my opinion. Condescending, patronizing, discriminatory, elitist, demeaning, superior, belittling, downright hypocritical from the man who also spouts that all men should be treated equally.

And the statement you felt shows all those things: “Atticus says cheatin‘ a colored man is ten times worse than cheatin’ a white man,” I muttered. “Says it’s the worst thing you can do.”

Interpretation translated into a personal opinion, I suppose.

In my opinion it is akin to a 'carer' saying 'Be kind to the little retard children. Remember the poor little dumb souls don't know they are a dribblin' so.'

I would like to rephrase your 'retard children' statement to be more the equivalent of what Atticus said to Scout: "Atticus says we've got to try ten times as hard to keep from laughing at our idiot cousin. He'll be drooling all over hisself and not even know it. It'd be a ten times bigger sin to treat him bad than it would one of our other half-smart cousins."

I don't see that as anything but good parenting.

Atticus's statement indicates that the originators sentiment is that “a white man” is a factor of ten times superior or more advantaged compared to the “colored folk”. Whether that be in terms of vulnerability, susceptibility, intelligence, privilege or whatever. It is an elitist and condescending mind-set.

I think it is a statement of how much of a disadvantage blacks were placed at by the laws and institutions of the South at that time . The novel is set in the period of 1933-35. Here is some of what was going on https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/pos … udy-finds/

Blacks who fled the South were then met in the North with Sundown Towns http://sundown.afro.illinois.edu/sundowntowns.php Click on your state to find out if your town was a Sundown Town: "Nigger, Don't Let The Sun Go Down On You In ___." 

“Atticus says cheatin‘ a colored man is ten times worse than cheatin’ a white man,” I muttered. “Says it’s the worst thing you can do.”

In my opinion (interpretation) it is a statement of pure bigotry but not from the mouth of a bigot character but from the mouth and mind of the supposedly un-bigoted character.

Pure bigotry? Are you saying he is showing bigotry toward a colored man or toward a white man who cheats a colored man? If I were telling my 6-year old daughter in 1933 how much worse it was to cheat a colored man than a white man, I would have put it at twenty times, at least. Atticus was speaking of what great odds colored men were up against in the system at that time.

It is scary because it shows the racism is inherent and deeply engrained or institutionalised and it shows that at his core Atticus is a racist and doesn’t even know it. In terms of the novel it a least gives the Atticus character some depth. Without it he is just a sounding board for ‘stock’ noble mantras.

To me it showed that Atticus recognized how racist the system was against colored men. You have picked out a passage that I will want to find when I read this again. Is it early in the story? It does shine a light on the Atticus of Go Set a Watchman. In Go Set a Watchman Atticus is still a leader in the town's White Citizens Council or some such.

I know this was written in the 60’s but I find it hard not to relate to the day-to-day and subliminally put this in the context of say, the white man, Hilary Clinton and the black man, Barak Obama and the solemn directive that one is ten times more superior to the other on account of skin tone and ancestory.

To Kill a Mockingbird was published in 1960. It was set in 1933-35. Hillary Clinton was born in 1947, Barack Obama was born in 1961. The Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964. The Equal Rights Amendment (for women) failed in 1979.

To me it seems that the statement is based purely upon the perspective of racial denominations and nothing else. The racist’s automatic, fundamental belief that an illiterate “white man” farm-hand of low IQ is ten times superior to the “black man” brain-surgeon purely upon the basis of their ethnicity. Essentially, to me, this is saying that one of those pair is a more important human being than the other.

What it says to me is that the white man, whatever his station in life was always favored in any transaction with the colored man. Atticus is reminding his 6-year old daughter that the systems and institutions are rigged to cheat a black man.

I can’t read this book; I have neither the time nor the spirit. I’m half-way into the re-read but I’m done. If it were a paperback rather than a free-to-read pdf, it’d be lobbed it into a hedge to join my first copy of this dirge.

In my opinion the first few chapters are sort of okay, but it degenerates after that.

Sorry. No hard feelings; horses for courses and all that. It is simply not my bag. To me it reads as a shallow sounding board for anti-racism mantras. It is as an appealing piece of literature to me, as say a Mills & Bloom or Harlequin novel where the romance premise is swapped for a racisim premise.

In terms of a story I think the author should have had Maudie Atkinson murdered and Tom Robinson accused.  Much more of a whodunit with more depth and meat upon the bones.

But that’s just me. I love Dicken’s ‘A tale of Two Cities’ but others hate it. I really like ‘Gone with the Wind’ but plenty decry the novel. I am a great enthusiast of the novels of John le Carré and many of his titles are beloved to me, but there is a huge amount of readers who simply cannot stand his writing. Japanese eat dolphin and whale, the Koreans eat dog. Marilyn Manson and Slipknot are to some, as Beethoven and Bach are to others. An episode of ‘The Walton’s’ will make some viewers feel emotionally warm and glowing and others will be left with a splash of vomit in their mouths.

Preference and interpretation, we are all different, we all like different stuff. We all dislike different stuff. Likers like and haters hate.

I don’t like ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ and that is from my gut. Like a spoonful of dolphin soup it is distasteful to me.  Sorry, it just is what it is. The prose simply does not fly in my mind, it does not engage me, my attention wanders, I lose focus and become  bored.

Apparently, there is a movie and I might try that in order to see how the story and prose translates from the page into a script with actors and orators.

The movie was nominated for 8 Academy Awards and won 3. Gregory Peck won for his role as Atticus. It was a compelling and moving movie for me.

Anyway, I’m moving on from this conversation; this novel because I have nothing of value to add. I’m glad that ‘To Kill a Mocking Bird’ exists, I feel that it adds to the rich tableau of Literature and I think this community has held a splendid conversation upon the novel and I’m richer for that. I fully respect anyone who likes or loves the the novel but I’ve discovered (or confirmed) that I really don’t like it.

My guess is that it is the favorite novel of many southern Americans of my age (72) who lived through the time of the life and death of Martin Luther King.

As much as I don’t like the novel, I do respect the success it has achieved and I also acknowledge the joy it has bought to so many people. I would also like to express my respect for the author Harper Lee and my condolences to her family and friends.

I have a whole lot of friends who refuse to read Go Set a Watchman because it reveals that Atticus was acting against his beliefs in To Kill a Mockingbird.  In Go Set a Watchman, set some 20 years later, Atticus believes blacks are still not ready to take on the full responsibilities of being citizens.

I'm not sure if it mentions that Negroes were counted as 3/5s of a man by the Constitution, the founding law of America. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three-Fifths_Compromise

Cheers! Dill

Memphis