151 (edited by Dill Carver 2016-03-14 20:31:49)

Re: A great loss

corra wrote:
Dill Carver wrote:

Look out for Braxton Bragg Underwood, the newspaper owner. He openly dislikes black people and yet publicly (vociferously) defends Tom’s right to a fair trial.

I'd forgotten about him!

Dill Carver wrote:

I seem to be the only one who thinks this duality is skewed morality.

Nope, I agree with you. I'm not, in this thread, defending Atticus, by the way. Though I concede I can't seem to unlike him yet, for reasons I shared offline and which are utterly fallible and personal to me, I agree that he is problematic. I shared the criticism above not to disprove your points, but to offer some context from current criticism which I haven't personally confirmed.

I was reading earlier that Alexandra tries to instill "ladyhood" in Scout while simultaneously violating its rules. This sort of subtle contradiction within the text is (I think) the basis for "thinking" Lee anticipated in readers. Like the parallel of Atticus with Underwood.

I think you're an incredibly deep reader and I appreciate you unearthing this stuff. xx

I'm looking deeply into why I sense that Atticus is an overt racist, in order to reply to Memphis...

In Chapter 20, Atticus says in response to a heinous lie;   

"Which, gentlemen, we know is in itself a lie as black as Tom Robinson's skin, a lie I do not have to point out to you."

Why automatically bring Tom's skin color into it? Black is evil, right?  The lie is as as symbolically evil as Tom's skin tone? I'm reading this I'm thinking WTF!!

The truth? Well, that'd be as white and pure as Atticius's skin, I suppose.

Surely someone who is not the victim of endemic racism would say;

"Which, gentlemen, we know is in itself a lie as plain as the nose on your face, a lie I do not have to point out to you."


Maybe it's just me being oversensitive, and saying, 'a lie as black as Tom Robinson's skin,' is a perfectly non-racist metaphor.

The same as saying,  'a lie as black as chimney sweep,'   But hold on, the connotation there is dirty or grimy not evil. In Atticus's world a white man with black skin is grimy whilst a black man's skin is abhorrent.

152 (edited by Dill Carver 2016-03-14 20:35:18)

Re: A great loss

It's those little things...   Atticus always addresses the white folk by either prefixed by their title, i.e. Mrs., Miss, Mr. or their complete name, i.e. Bob Ewell etc. but the Negros are only ever referenced by their first name. It is like there is no respect for them and they are addressed like a pet dog.

This may just be me noticing this, as johnny foreigner. I can't find one Mr. Robinson from Atticus's (or any other) mouth.

Re: A great loss

I'm not saying this is not the way people in Alabama in the '30's spoke. I'm just saying that racism is endemic within that time and place and in terms of the perception of racial boundaries, Atticus is in there with the best of them.

Re: A great loss

Dill Carver wrote:

Okay I’ll get digging, but please understand that my understanding of racism is;

A person who believes that a particular race is superior to another.


No. A black person may just feel he doesn't like white people generally; and vice-versa.

However, a fictional white lawyer may feel superior to black folk because he is as far he knows better educated and cultured, and as for any  other people who are neither white nor male, they could be equal but also the exceptions which prove the rule.

That is the philosophy of scepticism in your thinking that definitions are subjective and the very foundation for  the political-philosophy behind racism. You are a racist because you think like a racist who by no reasonable definition must think one race is superior to another race..

Brother of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers endorses Trump

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Re: A great loss

So if I grow up surrounded by black people who are the product--or wreckage--of inner city schools, and I am surprised to find a black doctor in the emergency room, who rapidly computes dosage for a body weight and reels off alternative drugs and their side effects like the street kids name their half-brothers, am I a racist, or just exhibiting the limits of my experience?

Re: A great loss

Dill Carver wrote:
Charles_F_Bell wrote:
njc wrote:

True of all philosophy.  So ... we should stop asking?

Only "true" in the sophistry of Carver's implicit solipsism - when in reality "any definition" (which is of a word created for a concept) is true to the extent it can be demonstrated to correspond to the nature of things.  http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/truth-correspondence/

The only true in Bell's end, is that it is.

Well then, The Incoherence Theory it is.

Re: A great loss

njc wrote:

So if I grow up surrounded by black people who are the product--or wreckage--of inner city schools, and I am surprised to find a black doctor in the emergency room, who rapidly computes dosage for a body weight and reels off alternative drugs and their side effects like the street kids name their half-brothers, am I a racist, or just exhibiting the limits of my experience?

If you believe any social-determinist political propositions, which is to say, all sociology-derived truisms, yes, you'd be surprised and basically a racist, like all sociologists.

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Dill Carver wrote:

It's those little things...   Atticus always addresses the white folk by either prefixed by their title, i.e. Mrs., Miss, Mr. or their complete name, i.e. Bob Ewell etc. but the Negros are only ever referenced by their first name. It is like there is no respect for them and they are addressed like a pet dog.

YUP. This is one of my mother's favorite novels. I was telling her about your remarks here -- specifically the two passages I've quoted here. Before I could finish, she was nodding her head. That's racism, however polite he is. If he saw Tom Robinson as an equal, he'd address him with similar deference.

Dill Carver wrote:

Why automatically bring Tom's skin color into it?

Agreed.

I'm seeing the point here. People rally around this book (myself included) as if Atticus is the hero of all heroes, & the issue (if I'm understanding right) isn't that Atticus lacks some heroic qualities, or that the book is necessarily bad. I think Atticus does have some heroic qualities, especially for a man of that time. And I think Harper Lee wrote one story which grew a life of its own. The issue is that if people cannot see Atticus as he sincerely was, what else aren't we seeing deeply? For example. Literature is our opportunity to test our critical thinking, and if we choose not to, we may make the same choice in life.

This is why it's a problem that this book is so often assigned in schools? I wasn't quite following several days ago, but good stuff. I think it could be interesting if teachers interrogate this novel as you have been, Dill. But I sense that the issue is that they are not. I was never taught this book in school, so I have no way to guess whether it's used to feed nostalgia or to feed critical thinking. It (could) offer an opportunity to teach students to read against the grain rather than with it.

Not to say I still don't love the book. I do. I'm loving it more for the deep analysis. I sense purpose in Lee's pen -- nuances I'd missed which, I believe, actually enrich the work.

(Pardon me for being uncritical, but sometimes after hours of school, I can't take a book that requires anything but passive imagination and pleasant feelings. Which is why I do love a cozy story. Sometimes it's just the ticket. To Kill a Mockingbird deserves more!) x

Re: A great loss

Charles_F_Bell wrote:
Dill Carver wrote:

Okay I’ll get digging, but please understand that my understanding of racism is;

A person who believes that a particular race is superior to another.


No. A black person may just feel he doesn't like white people generally; and vice-versa.

However, a fictional white lawyer may feel superior to black folk because he is as far he knows better educated and cultured, and as for any  other people who are neither white nor male, they could be equal but also the exceptions which prove the rule.

That is the philosophy of scepticism in your thinking that definitions are subjective and the very foundation for  the political-philosophy behind racism. You are a racist because you think like a racist who by no reasonable definition must think one race is superior to another race..

Brother of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers endorses Trump

So, my understanding of racism is a 'no'.

A person who believes that a particular race is superior to another.

A white supremacist  or black supremacism are based upon non-racist ideologies?

Yes, I see that now.

http://crooksandliars.com/2014/04/virgi … acist-were

160 (edited by njc 2016-03-15 01:08:43)

Re: A great loss

So if I grew up inland, where the lakes and rivers are freshwater, and one day learned the hard way that a tidal estuary is salty, I would be an anti-salinist?  If I were a child who wandered off his cul-de-sac into heavy traffic, I would be an anti-motorist?

It takes time to unlearn, and it should.  One outlier should not invalidate all data, but supplement it, and re-open the conclusions to question, not close them again.  Nor should one throw away all new data.  Just because Party W has always seemed to represent your interest, you should be ready to recognize when it doesn't.

And there is the greatness of an Atticus, surrounded all his life by blacks who have been forced to act inferior and subservient.  Without changing his beliefs about people's capacities, he recognizes injustices that transcend his learned error and acts on them.  He does not confabulate the one 'fact' (as he regards his error) with the question of Robinson's guilt or innocence.

You might say the same of the news-publisher ... but he knows that the free press relies on the courts to remain free, and he may also have it in for the Establishment of the town, so his motives might not be so clear.

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Dill Carver wrote:

In Chapter 20, Atticus says in response to a heinous lie;   

"Which, gentlemen, we know is in itself a lie as black as Tom Robinson's skin, a lie I do not have to point out to you."

Surely someone who is not the victim of endemic racism would say;

"Which, gentlemen, we know is in itself a lie as plain as the nose on your face, a lie I do not have to point out to you."

Maybe it's just me being oversensitive, and saying, 'a lie as black as Tom Robinson's skin,' is a perfectly non-racist metaphor.

The same as saying,  'a lie as black as chimney sweep,'   But hold on, the connotation there is dirty or grimy not evil. In Atticus's world a white man with black skin is grimy whilst a black man's skin is abhorrent.

It may also be a lawyer-advocate using the words that will hit home hardest, by choosing a metaphor that links their assumptions of guilt back into themselves.

I don't think you're oversensitive to note the use.  But I argue that you need to consider the whole constellation of motive and means in the character.

I would love for my characters to inspire such tangled discussion!

162 (edited by Dill Carver 2016-03-15 02:13:43)

Re: A great loss

corra wrote:

(Pardon me for being uncritical, but sometimes after hours of school, I can't take a book that requires anything but passive imagination and pleasant feelings. ....Which is why I do love a cozy story. Sometimes it's just the ticket.

corra wrote:

To Kill a Mockingbird deserves more!) x

Yes and no.

You made me think, why am I here debating this book; dissecting the characters?

Atticus is a good man doing the best that he can in bad times. A cosy story that is dear to so many. Mockingbird is a fiction. It is exactly what its editors wanted it to be, a cosy story; as simple as that. It has its heroes and villains, good versus evil, and an ending that is sad yet satisfying at the same time.  It's like a Mary Poppins or a Lassie and here I am demanding validity from the fiction as if it were fact. So what if there are a few mixed morality issues if you dig deep? I may as well be criticizing the validity of Mary Poppins’ ability to fly by umbrella.

I must learn to let it be.

Why am I spending so much time and energy discussing a book that I don’t particularly like when I could be in the company of the literature that I love; or heaven forbid, writing something myself?

The argument here looks set to descend into a contentious argument upon one person’s definition of racism over another. I guess that for anyone to make or concede a point about Mockingbird, that it would always come down to that.

But hey, this conversation bought to mind that I did read and really enjoy another novel set in the USA in the 1930’s. I was in hospital a few years ago following an operation and from the Red Cross book-share trolley that was wheeled about the ward, I took a lucky-dip and happened upon ‘The Persian Pickle Club’ by Sandra Dallas. I think it is deemed to be within the genre called ‘Women’s Fiction’ and I read it under the influence of medication; but it was good, very good. It made me feel good whilst I was feeling bad. It probably sold about fifty copies to Harper Lee’s six hundred and fifty million but I’d readily give it a score of 8 to Mockingbird's 5.

Onwards, corrabird, I think that my participation within the discussion upon Harper Lee’s Mockingbird is done. I shall be active in respect of chat upon other books, over on the other channel.

In the meantime; yes… kill as many blue jays as you like; slaughter them, but never, ever harm a metaphorical hair upon the head of the mythical Mockingbird.
x

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Re: A great loss

njc wrote:

So if I grew up inland, where the lakes and rivers are freshwater, and one day learned the hard way that a tidal estuary is salty, I would be an anti-salinist?  If I were a child who wandered off his cul-de-sac into heavy traffic, I would be an anti-motorist?


Only in that world where lakes and rivers and motor vehicles are people of the same species, but different race and if you, say, a plank of wood, considered yourself inherently superior to said rivers, lakes and motor vehicles. Which no doubt, you wood. (Deliberate pun BTW)

I'm sorry sir, but I find your analogy ridiculous and although I have indeed risen to your bait, I will have no more of it. Mr Bell might be up for a ding-dong debate about it though.

Good luck.

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Re: A great loss

I will indulge in a parting shot, then, and suggest that rejecting my analogies also rejects the idea that people learn about people by mechanisms alike to those by which they learn about things.

To those who might still be listening, I ask whether there is so great a sacred-profane divide between our human environment and our physical environment that our learning processes of them must have nothing in common.

Newton showed that the laws of physics in the sky are the same as those on earth; I'm arguing (on much less rigorous grounds, to be sure) that our learning of people-society-culture is of the same kind as our learning of hard-soft-hot-cold-safe-dangerous.

We judge people not only by their results but by their motives.  Great injustice and great harm arise from forgetting, ignoring, or rejecting consideration of either motives OR results.  People who wish to praise often concentrate on whichever is praiseworthy; people who wish to condemn, on whichever is contemnible.

To the claim that I argue at the level of Charles Bell, I deny the claim:  He argues (and thinks) at a very high level of abstraction and categorization.  When I have parsed his arguments, I often disagree at least in part, and sometimes agree in part.  He and I have to work hard to reach the point (stasis) where we understand and agree on our disagreement.  But it is a challenge for me to work at his level and (pardon me, Charles!) the effort is often hard for me to budget.  It would not surprise me if he has to work as hard to reach down to my level, and I thank him for the times he has obliged me.

The foregoing has been edited.

We thank you for listening and now return you to your regularly scheduled discussion ...

Re: A great loss

Dill Carver wrote:
Charles_F_Bell wrote:
Dill Carver wrote:

Okay I’ll get digging, but please understand that my understanding of racism is;

A person who believes that a particular race is superior to another.


No. A black person may just feel he doesn't like white people generally; and vice-versa.

However, a fictional white lawyer may feel superior to black folk because he is as far he knows better educated and cultured, and as for any  other people who are neither white nor male, they could be equal but also the exceptions which prove the rule.

That is the philosophy of scepticism in your thinking that definitions are subjective and the very foundation for  the political-philosophy behind racism. You are a racist because you think like a racist who by no reasonable definition must think one race is superior to another race..

Brother of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers endorses Trump

So, my understanding of racism is a 'no'.

That is correct.  Racism is a prejudice of an individual based on that individual's race.  That's it.

Dill Carver wrote:

A person who believes that a particular race is superior to another.

A white supremacist  or black supremacism are based upon non-racist ideologies?

Your understanding of 'racism' is so blithely incorrect  as to force you to use a completely different word-concept to cover up your error. In point of fact,  'supremacism' has nothing to do with racism, per se, or certainly, one needs to particularize the term to its context, such as a Jew/Roman Catholic/Muslim who thinks his people of their faith are the chosen people of God is a supremacist.

Dill Carver wrote:

Yes, I see that now.

I'm sure that you don't.

Re: A great loss

njc wrote:

I will indulge in a parting shot, then, and suggest that rejecting my analogies also rejects the idea that people learn about people by mechanisms alike to those by which they learn about things.

To those who might still be listening, I ask whether there is so great a sacred-profane divide between our human environment and our physical environment that our learning processes of them must have nothing in common.

Newton showed that the laws of physics in the sky are the same as those on earth; I'm arguing (on much less rigorous grounds, to be sure) that our learning of people-society-culture is of the same kind as our learning of hard-soft-hot-cold-safe-dangerous.

As a generality, I disagree, but my reasoning is from a complicated understanding that there is in reality no such thing as determinism -- except within a narrow context of classical physics -- which is why you'd have to reach out to Newton to support your assertion. Every horror of Man against man is brought by thinking that all we have to do is teach the individual that X is wrong, even if we have to kill him in the process. After all, we teach a lunar module to land with sufficient efficacious precision, don't we?

Whether X (where X is nothing like landing a lunar module)  is a right or wrong thing to do can be ascertained by looking through the prism of morality and not utility, and 'morality' is to an individual's actions as kinetics is to an individual molecules's actions.

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Re: A great loss

Charles_F_Bell wrote:
njc wrote:

Newton showed that the laws of physics in the sky are the same as those on earth; I'm arguing (on much less rigorous grounds, to be sure) that our learning of people-society-culture is of the same kind as our learning of hard-soft-hot-cold-safe-dangerous.

...

As a generality, I disagree, but my reasoning is from a complicated understanding that there is in reality no such thing as determinism -- except within a narrow context of classical physics -- which is why you'd have to reach out to Newton to support your assertion. Every horror of Man against man is brought by thinking that all we have to do is teach the individual that X is wrong, even if we have to kill him in the process. ...

Whether X (where X is nothing like landing a lunar module)  is a right or wrong thing to do can be ascertained by looking through the prism of morality and not utility, and 'morality' is to an individual's actions as kinetics is to an individual molecules's actions.

I'm not sure I know how to evaluate your last claim, so all I'll say is that I wasn't addressing that point.  I was addressing how we learn in the two realms, and to what degree the methods and mechanisms are comparable--if they are at all.  I believe, on the basis of subjective experience and the Principle of Parsimony, that to a large degree they are.  But of formal proof I have none.  (Argument by analogy is an important mode of legal argument, and I believe it also plays a role in much moral reasoning, particularly in in considering what is just in a particular circumstance.)

Implicit in my point (but not occult) is that learning matters, ie. that morality and social regard of others is largely learned behavior.

168 (edited by corra 2016-03-15 11:14:49)

Re: A great loss

Dill Carver wrote:

Why am I spending so much time and energy discussing a book that I don’t particularly like when I could be in the company of the literature that I love; or heaven forbid, writing something myself?

Putting into words what we dislike about a book is good exercise, I think. I hope it's been a rich discussion for you. It certainly has been for me, up to this point. I think a good novel can hold up to reasoned debate among friends, and that deconstructing it is a fine way to strengthen our own writing and sense of what we want to say within a work of our own literature. When this conversation started, I could offer really no reason why I loved To Kill a Mockingbird beyond the banal "it's cozy." This conversation has changed that, and I thank you for it!

I respect every reason you've offered for disliking the novel. I think we differ in our sense of the author's intent. I want to reread the book for myself, and see if I can unearth a method behind the uncomfortable inconsistencies you've cited within the book (such as the Underwood/Atticus parallel, and the Mayella story as laid aside Scout's story, and Tom Robinson's story.)

My feeling is that these places are part of the truth Lee was hoping would be sensed in the undercurrent. I'd like to see what effect they offer for me personally. But that may take me a few reads! And a bit more experience in literature to unlock what instinct is sensing and cannot, at this point, put into words. If these inconsistencies are not a part of her original purpose, it would certainly effect my sense of the novel.

Anyway, right you are, to dig deep into it, and right you are to leave now that the tone of the conversation has changed.

Dill Carver wrote:

I was in hospital a few years ago following an operation and from the Red Cross book-share trolley that was wheeled about the ward, I took a lucky-dip and happened upon ‘The Persian Pickle Club’ by Sandra Dallas. I think it is deemed to be within the genre called ‘Women’s Fiction’ and I read it under the influence of medication; but it was good, very good. It made me feel good whilst I was feeling bad. It probably sold about fifty copies to Harper Lee’s six hundred and fifty million but I’d readily give it a score of 8 to Mockingbird's 5.

I've just added The Persian Pickle Club to my to-read list.

Thank you for the quotes you found in TKAM, and the points you've made. I've loved it & feel I walk away from it with some thoughts knocked about and tested in the best way. A proper shred, Dill.

I hope you read something that thrills you to the soul, next. Cheers! x

Re: A great loss

njc wrote:
Charles_F_Bell wrote:
njc wrote:

Newton showed that the laws of physics in the sky are the same as those on earth; I'm arguing (on much less rigorous grounds, to be sure) that our learning of people-society-culture is of the same kind as our learning of hard-soft-hot-cold-safe-dangerous.

...

As a generality, I disagree, but my reasoning is from a complicated understanding that there is in reality no such thing as determinism -- except within a narrow context of classical physics -- which is why you'd have to reach out to Newton to support your assertion. Every horror of Man against man is brought by thinking that all we have to do is teach the individual that X is wrong, even if we have to kill him in the process. ...

Whether X (where X is nothing like landing a lunar module)  is a right or wrong thing to do can be ascertained by looking through the prism of morality and not utility, and 'morality' is to an individual's actions as kinetics is to an individual molecules's actions.

I'm not sure I know how to evaluate your last claim, so all I'll say is that I wasn't addressing that point.  I was addressing how we learn in the two realms, and to what degree the methods and mechanisms are comparable--if they are at all.  I believe, on the basis of subjective experience and the Principle of Parsimony, that to a large degree they are.  But of formal proof I have none.  (Argument by analogy is an important mode of legal argument, and I believe it also plays a role in much moral reasoning, particularly in in considering what is just in a particular circumstance.)

Implicit in my point (but not occult) is that learning matters, ie. that morality and social regard of others is largely learned behavior.

The hardest part to fathom is the moral sense not the rules is not learned behavior  -- like language. Trained in socialist thinking, or rather prior to the 18th century, neo-Platonic, so many people believe that neither language nor any moral sense is intricately woven into the brain, not in any intrinsic way; i.e., in toto intact from birth, but of an inevitable working of the brain from birth to 18-24 mos.  The particulars of communication of all concepts, whether of morality or utility, can and will be intersubjectively exchanged so long as the brain is functioning normally. Those are by the rules of intersubjective communication, first in language, then in everything else. However,  if there is so much of the mind, including the private language itself, that works on its own irrespective of any teaching (purposeful intersubjective communication), teaching lies on the periphery of human existence, not the forefront. I therefore then make the leap that a culture of the taught is a dying or dead culture.

Re: A great loss

  Buffalotales wrote:

Yes, I just read that her novel was second only to the Bible.

The last I heard it was The Bible, Atlas Shrugged, the Koran.  "To Kill a Mockingbird" though is one of the best sellers of all time.  And to the critic here, yes, it's mandatory reading in the US too, but there's a reason for it.  Actually, I suppose two--just like the Germans pursue policies to prevent Nazism from ever happening again, the US pursues policies to prevent the racism portrayed in the book from happening.  But it's also just a really good story.

Re: A great loss

Here's the thing: Every lawyer wants to BE Atticus Finch. Including me.

And if people can't appreciate the beauty of Harper Lee's prose in TKAM, well that's just a damn shame. Truly.

172 (edited by corra 2016-06-25 20:55:16)

Re: A great loss

I found this really interesting discussion against the novel online (contains spoilers immediately upon clicking). I think the speaker of the video makes a lot of really interesting points. I really like the way he compares America's reception of To Kill a Mockingbird versus Go Set a Watchman. Really solid remarks, I think. (From what I watched. I skimmed a bit.) He seems to echo some of what Dill said above. He mentions the way Lee emphasizes Boo's whiteness at the end of the novel: I'd missed that. (SPOILER FOLLOWS) Robinson is black and he dies; Boo is white and he is spared. I think the speaker fails, though, to consider Lee may have done this on purpose, not to condone it, but to bring it to light. He (may) also fail to consider that Lee wrote for a middlebrow audience, not to romanticize the issue, but to attempt to reach the middling sorts. :-)

"Boo had drifted to a corner of the room, where he stood with his chin up, peering from a distance at Jem. I took him by the hand, a hand surprisingly warm for its whiteness. I tugged him a little, and he allowed me to lead him to Jem’s bed."

I still love the book. I love it because I love it. I still haven't bothered to reread it and have anything intelligent to say in this thread -- evidence perhaps that I don't quite love it enough. smile I like to see it challenged and beaten about. I'm not sure I'll ever consider it beneath the effort.

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Re: A great loss

corra wrote:

I found this really interesting discussion against the novel online (contains spoilers immediately upon clicking). I think the speaker of the video makes a lot of really interesting points. I really like the way he compares America's reception of To Kill a Mockingbird versus Go Set a Watchman. Really solid remarks, I think. (From what I watched. I skimmed a bit.) He seems to echo some of what Dill said above. He mentions the way Lee emphasizes Boo's whiteness at the end of the novel: I'd missed that. (SPOILER FOLLOWS) Robinson is black and he dies; Boo is white and he is spared. I think the speaker fails, though, to consider Lee may have done this on purpose, not to condone it, but to bring it to light. He (may) also fail to consider that Lee wrote for a middlebrow audience, not to romanticize the issue, but to attempt to reach the middling sorts. :-)

"Boo had drifted to a corner of the room, where he stood with his chin up, peering from a distance at Jem. I took him by the hand, a hand surprisingly warm for its whiteness. I tugged him a little, and he allowed me to lead him to Jem’s bed."

I still love the book. I love it because I love it. I still haven't bothered to reread it and have anything intelligent to say in this thread -- evidence perhaps that I don't quite love it enough. smile I like to see it challenged and beaten about. I'm not sure I'll ever consider it beneath the effort.

I don't see the reference to "whiteness" in this instance as addressing "race" at all, rather the cold whiteness of someone scared (as in turning pale with fright) which in this instance was surprising because of his warmth which in turn might lead one to think he wasn't scared at all, merely shy. At any rate, I refuse to adjust my initial fondness for TKAM because of the change in character presented by Go Set a Watchman. To me, the two books are dealing with different characters with the same name from different viewpoints. Take care. Vern