|
|
|
![]() |
|
NGE >> Features >> Literature >> Fiction >> Works >> |
|
|
The Wind Done Gone Few novels have captured the popular American imagination more strongly than Margaret Mitchell's 1936 book, Gone With the Wind. Its sweeping, romantic story of the South and the Civil War (1861-65) has entranced readers since the day of its publication. Many readers, however, especially African Americans, have complained that the novel is one-sided. They say that it demeans the role of blacks and that its portrayals of such characters as Mammy and Prissy are racist stereotypes. For them, Gone With the Wind has little to tell us about the real experiences of African Americans in the South during and after the Civil War. In 2001 Alice Randall, a Harvard literature graduate and Nashville, Tennessee,
Randall loosely based her characters on Mitchell's, though she gave them different names and to some extent redefined them. Gerald O'Hara is Planter, his wife is Lady, Scarlett is Other, and Rhett Butler is R. The plantation Tara becomes Tata. Some of the slaves have altered names as well: Pork becomes Garlic, for instance. Planter is a drunk easily manipulated by Garlic, who in fact runs the plantation. Because his wife is sexually cold, Planter takes Mammy as his mistress. Rhett Butler, in Mitchell's novel a swaggering, virile figure, in Randall's is aging and gray-haired. Scarlett, the strongest character in Mitchell's novel, is weak and given to hysteria in Randall's. Parody or Appropriation? Alice Randall has described her book as a parody, a novel that stands in a long tradition of writing that makes fun of other literary works.
Randall appealed, and with the support of such well-known writers as Arthur Schlesinger, Harper Lee, Pat Conroy, Charles Johnson, James Alan McPherson, Larry McMurtry, Shelby Foote, and Toni Morrison, she argued that as a parody her book offered a time-honored literary response to another novel. "My book is a parody of Gone With the Wind. Gone With the Wind in certain ways divides the nation into white and black. My book unites the nation. Ultimately, most of the characters in my book turn out to be black, which is a way to make that line invisible. So, my book is a critique of Gone With the Wind in the form of a parody." Randall compared her book to the eighteenth-century English novel Shamela by Henry Fielding, which makes light of Samuel Richardson's novel Pamela. On May 25, 2001, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta agreed with Randall's argument and ruled in her favor. The Wind Done Gone was published shortly thereafter and quickly became a best seller, remaining on the New York Times list for many weeks. The Mitchell Foundation again appealed, but the Eleventh Circuit Court upheld its decision in October 2001. Randall and the Mitchell Trusts reached an out-of-court settlement in May 2002 that ended the dispute. A Different Point of View The Wind Done Gone recounts many of the events in Gone With the Wind, but from a different point of view and with numerous satiric twists. Behind the fumbling white inhabitants of the plantation are the slaves and former slaves who keep things going and manage to get what they need to survive and prosper by manipulating their owners. Randall shows a deep understanding of Mitchell's novel, and her book is not without compassion for the white characters, whom she sees as victims of their own foibles and weaknesses. At the same time, she demonstrates that Gone With the Wind did not accurately portray the historical world of the nineteenth-century South and that Mitchell misunderstood the African American slaves on whom the white plantation owners depended to run their plantations, pick their cotton, work in their homes, and make their lives comfortable. An important theme in The Wind Done Gone is African American self-determination. Many of the black characters actively work to protect themselves and their loved ones, to improve their positions, and to provide for the future. While Mitchell presents Mammy as a selfless and devoted servant, Randall presents her as capable of any act that protects the welfare of herself and her loved ones. To maintain control over the household, for example, she has stealthily murdered at birth each of Planter's sons: she wants to remove any male heir who in the future might challenge her authority. Moreover, while Mitchell's novel does not acknowledge the possibility of love in the lives of the slaves at the O'Hara plantation, Randall gives Cynara a full romantic existence, especially in the novel's second half. In many ways The Wind Done Gone moves well beyond the novel it parodies. Rather than surviving to live another day, like Scarlett in Mitchell's story, the Scarlett figure dies. Cynara then follows R to Washington, D.C., where she meets important figures of the Reconstruction era, including Frederick Douglass, author of the famous slave narratives, as well as an African American congressman with whom she falls in love. As the novel concludes, with the end of Reconstruction and the days of Jim Crow laws looming, she takes steps to provide for the future welfare of her own descendants. She thus manages, in the pages of this novel written in the form of her diary, to chart the course of her own history. The Wind Done Gone as Literature As an African American response to Gone With the Wind, The Wind Done Gone is interesting and sometimes entertaining; however, it is not great literature. Cynthia Tucker, editorial page editor for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, puts it best: "Though clever in places, Randall's book is not that funny. Some reviewers say it does not meet the literary definition of parody, either. (That's probably OK since Gone With the Wind doesn't meet the definition of literature.)" Randall leaves too many plot lines undeveloped or incomplete, and most of the characters, including Planter, Other, and Cynara, are hazily indistinct. Randall's own intentions seem unclear—is she writing a parody, as she seems to be doing in the book's first half, or is she writing about a young woman's discovery of her life's purpose? The novel shows the mark of numerous influences, including Alice Walker, Margaret Walker, Frederick Douglass, Toni Morrison, and even William Faulkner, and it never develops its own style and identity. In some ways it substitutes for the myths of Mitchell's Old South another mythology all its own. But as a statement embodying African American reaction to the myths underlying Gone With the Wind, it is an important literary and historical document. Suggested Reading Karen Grigsby Bates, "A Through-the-Looking-Glass Version of Gone With the Wind," review of The Wind Done Gone, by Alice Randall, Journal of Blacks in Higher Education 33 (2001): 126-27. Cynthia Tucker, "'GWTW' Richly Deserves Parody by Black Writer," Atlanta Journal-Constitution, May 27, 2001. Jill Vejnoska, "Author Shakes South to Its Roots," Atlanta Journal-Constitution, May 27, 2001. Hugh Ruppersburg, University of Georgia Published 12/23/2002 |
|
|||||||
|
Home | What's New | Index | Quick Facts | About NGE | Help | Contact A project of the Georgia Humanities Council, in partnership with the University of Georgia Press, the University System of Georgia/GALILEO, and the Office of the Governor.
|