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Camelot Revisited: Jackie Spins the Kennedy Era From the Grave
Townhall.com ^ | September 16, 2011 | Suzanne Fields

Posted on 09/16/2011 7:23:16 AM PDT by Kaslin

Jackie Kennedy is back, but the world she knew as first lady is gone forever. The woman Mamie Eisenhower said looked "younger than Barbie," the fashion icon who didn't want to wear hats but capitulated at Jack's inauguration with a chic pillbox worn on the back of her head so it wouldn't ruin her bouffant hairdo, the widow who described her husband's administration as Camelot, a romantic notion as fanciful as the legend from which it was based, speaks again through a gossamer haze of pre-feminist politics.

The seven-part interview the former first lady gave to historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr., four months after the president was cut down in Dallas, has been published as a book and audio recording. "Jacqueline Kennedy: Historic Conversations on Life With John F. Kennedy," was released by her daughter Caroline on the 50th anniversary of her father's presidency. She reminds us that a first lady's public role reflects the times in which she lives and, of course, the man she lives with.

Jackie Kennedy was a transitional figure for many reasons. She followed Mamie Eisenhower, the wife of a hero of World War II, a first lady formed in the spit and polish world of the Army, who would run a white glove over a windowsill to see whether it was free of dust. Jackie was young and glamorous, raised in an East Coast society that knew the cultured rituals of the upper class, and who craved the protection of a husband as a father figure. She would not talk politics with him at the end of the day because he wanted it that way. Besides, she said women were too "emotional" to talk about politics.

She emphasized the arts, and brought highbrow culture to lowbrow Washington, the capital Jack famously described as a city of "Southern efficiency and Northern charm." Jackie raised the fashion and culinary taste of a city and a nation. Her bone-thin body was adorned by French designers, and she would be shocked by a muscular, athletic Michelle Obama at the U.S. Open tennis matches exhorting young people to "get active and healthy, to eat right, to appreciate exercise."

Arthur Schlesinger recalls on first meeting Jackie that "underneath a veil of lovely inconsequence, she concealed tremendous awareness, an all-seeing eye and a ruthless judgment." Some of her observations that we hear in Diane Sawyer's ABC Special about the new book testify to that awareness, eye and judgment. Some don't.

Her observations are snapshots, and she would change her mind over later years, but nevertheless express what she wanted to leave for the record. She is contemptuous of the Martin Luther King that her husband said was revealed in FBI wiretaps of a telephone conversation of King arranging a sex party on the eve of his famous March on Washington. Jackie would nevertheless come to admire the civil rights icon and attended King's funeral with his family four years later.

She was no doubt aware of her husband's extramarital affairs, but there is no mention of them in these interviews. She portrays herself as the adoring wife who never quarreled with Jack, perhaps wanting to maintain that image for her children as much as for history.

Such observations should be taken with more than a "warehouse of salt," historian Michael Bechloss observes in his introduction. Jackie was resolute in preserving a legend even from the grave. She was disappointed that Jack's assassin was, in her words, "a silly little communist." She modeled his funeral on that of Abraham Lincoln, trying to cast him in similarly heroic terms.

But the young president was considerably less accomplished than Abraham Lincoln and left a limited legacy. He might have wanted history to credit him with the civil-rights legislation that transformed America, but that would be credited to Lyndon Johnson, who muscled it through a reluctant Congress and was a man the Kennedys despised.

The first lady of Camelot, for all her demure image, was ruthless in trying to shape the image of her husband. She granted her first post-assassination interview to Theodore White, the Pulitzer Prize winning author, for Life magazine in December 1964. She insisted that the Camelot theme run through the White essay, that he write twice as a refrain: "It will never be that way again."

Jackie thought she was making a pre-emptive strike against historians she feared would not treat her husband as gently as deserved. She wanted to control her own history, too, by speaking from the grave. But the grave has many voices, and they never speak as one. You could ask Guinevere.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: caroline; jackie; jackiekennedy; jackiekennedytapes; jfk; kennedy

1 posted on 09/16/2011 7:23:21 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

I watched half of it and turned it off. What a whitewash, especially the revisionist comments from Caroline that were interspersed. Jackie covering for JFK, and then Caroline covering for Jackie? A waste of time.


2 posted on 09/16/2011 7:32:46 AM PDT by Genoa (Starve the beast.)
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To: Kaslin

. . . and Diane Sawyer has no shame.


3 posted on 09/16/2011 7:36:42 AM PDT by Genoa (Starve the beast.)
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To: Kaslin; Allegra; big'ol_freeper; Lil'freeper; TrueKnightGalahad; blackie; Cincinatus' Wife; ...
Ari, we will have four of the crab cakes, spinach and béarnaise sauce, pancetta... ciabatta, drizzled with a Hollandaise sauce and slow-cooked greens mixed with a fontina cheese fonduta.

You want fries... with that?

Yes, super-size... it all.

4 posted on 09/16/2011 7:43:36 AM PDT by Bender2 ("I've got a twisted sense of humor, and everything amuses me." RAH Beyond this Horizon)
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To: Kaslin

Her views on King are no different than 80% of the nation back then outside the media and black community and freedom riders.

His legacy is one thing....it’s beyond Greek mythology.

The reality..well...read what Reagan thought if folks think Jackie was full of it.

She did always want someone to replace daddy Black Jack Bouvier..and not lose the family fortune.


5 posted on 09/16/2011 7:52:15 AM PDT by wardaddy (, Dick Cheney ....get his book...he should have been President)
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To: Kaslin
she would be shocked by a muscular, athletic Michelle Obama

So would we:


6 posted on 09/16/2011 7:54:11 AM PDT by Jeff Chandler (I never win at Scrable.)
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To: Kaslin
. . .a muscular, athletic Michelle Obama. . .

ROFLMBO!

7 posted on 09/16/2011 7:57:00 AM PDT by MEGoody (Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.)
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To: MEGoody

‘she would be shocked by a muscular, athletic MO’ was exactly where I spewed, too.


8 posted on 09/16/2011 8:00:30 AM PDT by bboop
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To: Genoa
Jackie covering for JFK, and then Caroline covering for Jackie? A waste of time.

Really no surprise that family members would want to romanticize their memories of a lost loved one. People generally do this kind of thing in private conversations with family and friends. In this case, because of the Kennedy name, they got a bully pulpit to do it.

I'm not angry about it, but I do agree with you - a complete waste of time.

9 posted on 09/16/2011 8:00:55 AM PDT by MEGoody (Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.)
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To: Bender2

http://www.upi.com/News_Photos/gallery/New-images-of-Jacqueline-Kennedy-Onassis/3608/3


10 posted on 09/16/2011 8:04:08 AM PDT by kcvl
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To: MEGoody

ABC agreed not to show the film in exchange for this! The film would have had more truth in it.


11 posted on 09/16/2011 8:11:13 AM PDT by Genoa (Starve the beast.)
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To: Kaslin

Good think Rush Limbaugh didn’t say what Jackie said or he would be run out of the country!

******

Rev. Jesse Jackson, civil rights activist:

“Dr. King disturbed the comfortable and comforted the disturbed. In many ways, he traumatized many people with changes his leadership brought, but publicly she was very gracious.”

“Bobby Kennedy in his anxiety as Attorney General allowed J. Edgar Hoover to do the wire tapping. It just shows the spirit of the times,” Jackson said. “The people who hurt us was not Jackie Kennedy. The people who hurt us blocked school doors. They arrested us, unleashed the dogs and stood on the floor of the House and spoke against the public accommodations bill and set the climate of violence against us. I still see Jackie Kennedy in very favorable terms.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/therootdc/post/civil-rights-leaders-respond-to-jackie-kennedy/2011/09/15/gIQAatA1UK_blog.html


12 posted on 09/16/2011 8:13:05 AM PDT by kcvl
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To: Jeff Chandler

Michelle looks like a thug. How could she appear in public like that? I look better than that when I’m doing yard work.

The daughter must get her crazy sense of style from Mom.


13 posted on 09/16/2011 8:16:03 AM PDT by goldi (')
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To: Kaslin

I saw about one minute of her pointing out things in the White House.

It took me back to when “The First Family Album” by Vaughn Meader came out mocking the Kennedys. Jackie was vapidly and breathily (is that a word) pointing out the pictures in the White House. “There’s this little one over here, and there’s this big one here, etc.” The whole thing was hilarious. Can’t take her seriously.


14 posted on 09/16/2011 8:18:42 AM PDT by MayflowerMadam ("I know that God's tomorrow will be better than today!" A. H. Ackley)
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To: kcvl

Did Rush even say something about it?


15 posted on 09/16/2011 8:19:32 AM PDT by Kaslin (Acronym for OBAMA: One Big Ass Mistake America)
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To: Kaslin

Seat Pleasant Mayor Eugene Grant:

“Obviously, she has been tarnished and has been exposed for what she really was. That tells you something. She didn’t want the truth of who she was released until he she was dead. In reality, it was LBJ who pushed and put his own reputation on the line to get the Civil Rights act passed and not Kennedy. We need to give credit where credit is due and not a fairy tale. Camelot was fairy tale.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/therootdc/post/civil-rights-leaders-respond-to-jackie-kennedy/2011/09/15/gIQAatA1UK_blog.html


16 posted on 09/16/2011 8:34:30 AM PDT by kcvl
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To: Bender2

Bender question drive thru window is that Slingblade LOL!


17 posted on 09/16/2011 10:30:21 AM PDT by SevenofNine (We are Freepers, all your media belong to us ,resistance is futile)
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