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Atticus Finch and His Clay Feet
Townhall.com ^ | July 17, 2015 | Suzanne Fields

Posted on 07/17/2015 7:36:20 AM PDT by Kaslin

The controversy over Harper Lee's new "old" novel, "Go Set a Watchman," might be the most bizarre controversy yet in a summer of bizarre and unlikely explosions of national piety.

Atticus Finch, the patriarchal figure of "To Kill a Mockingbird," has been regarded as an unexpected hero in a region that many readers thought was unworthy of heroes -- mothers named their children after him -- and now many feel betrayed because he emerges in the new novel as a man with unexpected blemishes, an authentic representative of his time (the 1950s) and place (a small town in the South). How could he?

The Internet boils with indignation. Talk radio has checked in. The New York Times put a story about it at the top of Page 1. Since both books offer polemics inside the fiction, neither fits into a Procrustean bed of personal pride and prejudice, but offers insights, for the thoughtful reader, into the differences in racial and sexual attitudes and how they have radically changed in the 55 years since "Mockingbird" was published.

Since he's a fictional character in two novels it's important to judge Atticus Finch within the context of both the early book, "To Kill a Mockingbird," and the new one. Some readers are finding that hard to do. One benefit of the controversy is that the books can be read with fresh eyes, and "Mockingbird," especially, doesn't have to be stuck with the hand-me-down adoration. The adoration is as much for the movie with Gregory Peck as Atticus as the writing style of Harper Lee, which has limitations in spite of its innocent charm.

The young daughter Scout, the narrator of "Mockingbird," was a tomboy who resisted learning the genteel manners expected of a young woman of the South. The girl in a coming-of-age story in "Mockingbird" becomes an arrived-at-woman in "Watchman." She has learned to assert opinions independent of her Southern upbringing, and she spurns a conventional marriage because the prospective husband doesn't live up to the idealism she acquired living in New York.

Racial issues in both books become considerably more complicated in the hindsight of history. When "Mockingbird" was originally published in 1960, liberal readers loved Atticus; he confronted racists who dominated the law and the courts and regarded Negroes as inferior. If Atticus was a hero inside the novel, his kind of heroism was rapidly vanishing in the world outside the novel in the wake of the Brown decision mandating the end of segregation in public schools. He shames the racists into silence but is unwilling to see the racism outside his comfortable island of Maycomb, Alabama. He makes gestures that require courage, but it was courage that could not dent the fundamental structure of racism built into the culture.

Like politics, racism was local in "Mockingbird," but the patronizing platitudes of Atticus sound today like simplistic feel-good banality lacking the complexity of authentic moral courage. His thematic voice, even after the guilty verdict for the innocent black man he defended against rape, expresses passive perception as much as outrage.

"You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view," he tells his daughter Scout, "until you climb into his skin and walk in it." This is the bromide often quoted by examiners of the first Atticus, whose tolerance is open-ended for the racist as well as for his victim. He tells daughter Scout she shouldn't hate Hitler because it's not right to hate anyone. He even defends the leader of a lynch mob because he's "basically a good man," who "just has his blind spots along with the rest of us."

When Scout asks her father if he's a "n*****-lover," as she heard him described in her little town, he answers without irony, "I certainly am. I do my best to love everybody."

Readers of "Watchman" are shocked that this Atticus questions the inclusion of Negroes in the formerly white schools, an issue that tore the South apart after the Brown decision, dividing families, permanently rupturing friendships and sometimes splitting church congregations. Hardly any white folks wanted integration; the arguments were over who would bear the disruption of desegregation. The North got its first taste of such racial anger with the arrival of busing in liberal Massachusetts. "Watchman" is the tougher, more realistic but less artful book. The third-person narration lacks the charm of the child's voice in "Mockingbird," but raises more complicated questions of character when the fist hits the nose that thought it was immune from fists.

It's not so important how these two books came to be written, or the order in which the stories are told, but how they speak to us today. The questions of character and culture challenge all of us.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: atticusfinch; bookreview; gosetawatchman; harperlee; tkam; tokillamockingbird
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1 posted on 07/17/2015 7:36:20 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
she spurns a conventional marriage because the prospective husband doesn't live up to the idealism she acquired living in New York

Went to the big city and got turned into a lesbian.

2 posted on 07/17/2015 7:38:32 AM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either satire or opinion. Or both.)
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To: Kaslin
has been regarded as an unexpected hero in a region that many readers thought was unworthy of heroes -- mothers named their children after him -- and now many feel betrayed

Just one thing...Atticus Finch IS NOT REAL.

3 posted on 07/17/2015 7:39:15 AM PDT by Jim Noble (Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.)
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To: Kaslin

Wow, it’s been a shock to liberals, that Atticus is not as liberal across the board as they thought.

How many liberals named their child Atticus after Atticus Finch in Mockingbird? Maybe you should not name your child after fictional characters in books and movies???


4 posted on 07/17/2015 7:39:54 AM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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To: Kaslin

The order is important. She published the politically correct story.


5 posted on 07/17/2015 7:40:14 AM PDT by Sacajaweau
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To: Kaslin

In other news, Rhett Butler has been shown waving a Confederate Flag.

People are SHOCKED that Clark Gable would conscience such a thing!/s

(Fictional Characters do fictional things in fictional setting with fictional motives)


6 posted on 07/17/2015 7:40:20 AM PDT by left that other site (You shall know the Truth, and The Truth Shall Set You Free.)
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To: left that other site

Good points.

How many people are getting their panties in a twist over a FICTIONAL CHARACTER????? I can’t believe how many think Atticus was a role model of sorts, and that somehow he was a real person.


7 posted on 07/17/2015 7:42:06 AM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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To: Kaslin

Hey, does this mean we can bring back the Confederate Flag?

(couldn’t resist)


8 posted on 07/17/2015 7:42:26 AM PDT by Sapwolf (Talkers are usually more articulate than doers, since talk is their specialty. -Sowell)
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To: Kaslin
People are not up in armse because they can't believe Atticus Finch could be a racist. They're up in arms because they can't believe that Gregory Peck is.

Read "To Kill A Mockingbird". There is nothing in that book that gives any clue on what Atticus Finch might have believed on integration and Jim Crow in the 1930's. There is nothing that indicates he changed over the 20 years between the periods the books covered.

Got my copy of "Go Set A Watchman" yesteday. Re-reading "To Kill A Mockingbird" for the umpteenth time to refresh my memory for the new book. And I have no doubt I'll feel the same way about all the characters when I'm done.

9 posted on 07/17/2015 7:43:42 AM PDT by DoodleDawg
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To: Sacajaweau
The order is important. She published the politically correct story.

There was no politically correct story in 1960.

10 posted on 07/17/2015 7:44:45 AM PDT by DoodleDawg
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To: Kaslin

Whorealdo made me barf with his One More Thing proclaiming Atticus Finch as his guiding light and responsible for the direction of his life.

I wrote The Five that if they must plague us with Whorealdo, they need a man standing behind him with a hook to get him off camer when he goes off


11 posted on 07/17/2015 7:44:45 AM PDT by bert ((K.E.; N.P.; GOPc.;+12, 73, ..... No peace? then no peace!)
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To: Dilbert San Diego

Well, Gregory Peck also played Captain Ahab.

Someone who killed WHALES for a living! LOL!


12 posted on 07/17/2015 7:50:22 AM PDT by left that other site (You shall know the Truth, and The Truth Shall Set You Free.)
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To: BenLurkin
He even defends the leader of a lynch mob because he's "basically a good man," who "just has his blind spots along with the rest of us."

They will try to understand the POV of a child rapist, an Islamic terrorist murderer, or race rioters (as long as they're black).

But white racists are deserving of nothing but condemnation and destruction.

And they can't even see the irony in their own position.

13 posted on 07/17/2015 7:51:59 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: left that other site

Gregory Peck also played a NAZI doctor in the Boys from Brazil trying to clone a bunch of Hitler’s.

ERASE HIS NAME FROM HISTORY! LOL!!!!!!!


14 posted on 07/17/2015 7:54:10 AM PDT by LeonardFMason (LanceyHoward would AGREE)
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To: LeonardFMason

Oh yeah...I forgot that!


15 posted on 07/17/2015 7:55:34 AM PDT by left that other site (You shall know the Truth, and The Truth Shall Set You Free.)
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To: Kaslin

IOW, Atticus Finch is human...........................


16 posted on 07/17/2015 7:57:21 AM PDT by Red Badger (Man builds a ship in a bottle. God builds a universe in the palm of His hand.............)
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To: left that other site

But he wanted to kill a WHITE whale, so, it’s okay.....................


17 posted on 07/17/2015 7:58:24 AM PDT by Red Badger (Man builds a ship in a bottle. God builds a universe in the palm of His hand.............)
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To: Dilbert San Diego

Look how many people named their kid ‘Kunta Kinte’........................


18 posted on 07/17/2015 7:59:50 AM PDT by Red Badger (Man builds a ship in a bottle. God builds a universe in the palm of His hand.............)
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To: Jim Noble

C’mon, you know that leftists cannot differentiate reality from illusion (or delusion as the case may be).


19 posted on 07/17/2015 8:00:17 AM PDT by rockrr (Everything is different now...)
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To: Red Badger

Oh..of course!

I’m so silly. I forgot that.


20 posted on 07/17/2015 8:01:17 AM PDT by left that other site (You shall know the Truth, and The Truth Shall Set You Free.)
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