The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
Whether you’ve read this recently published “sequel” to To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee,
you’ve no doubt already read about the “ugly.”
Yes, Atticus Finch, the hero of To
Kill a Mockingbird, who defends a black man accused of raping a white woman
in the 1930s, is exposed as a segregationist and a racist in the 1950s. Some have deplored and mourned this toppling
of the white Southern hero; others have defended Go Set a Watchman’s representation of white supremacy in the Civil
Rights era South as much more realistic than its well known, popular
predecessor.
In either case, the novel, actually written before To Kill a Mockingbird, offers a
historical explanation for the difference in character. It seems that in the segregated South of the
1930s it was perfectly possible for a white man to be on reasonably good terms
with his black servants (young Scout was raised by a black maid, as well as her
single father, after her mother’s early death) and other African Americans,
since in those days “Negroes” knew their place and mostly stayed in it.
With the rise of the NAACP and the Civil Rights movement,
however, white paternalists such as Atticus Finch were threatened enough to
assert their racial “superiority” and resist all efforts to achieve integration
and equal rights of the races.
This ugliness, however realistic, is countered by the
outrage of 26-year-old Jean Louise (Scout), when she discovers a racist
pamphlet in her father’s desk and witnesses his attendance at a Citizens’
Council meeting, which is hosting a virulently racist speaker. Jean Louise’s horror when she discovers her
father’s racism, her willingness to confront him, as well as her boyfriend (who
also attended the meeting), and her support for Civil Rights could be
considered the “good” that somehow redeems the novel’s ugliness. At least that is one way to read it.
There is another example of ugliness, however, at the end of
the novel that goes unredeemed, and another way to read the novel as a whole
that may disappoint those wishing to somehow salvage Harper Lee’s
reputation. More of that later.
What about the “good”?
For all the talk about race, no reviewers I’ve read have mentioned the
feminist plot of Jean Louise rebelling, not only against the small-minded
racism of her hometown and her family, but also against the traditional small
town expectations for how women should dress, speak, and act.
Go Set a Watchman
takes the form of a coming of age narrative in which the protagonist is a
woman, who, after graduating from college, has left the South and moved to New
York City. She returns for a family
visit some time after the Supreme Court decision in Brown vs. the Board of
Education, which ruled segregation unconstitutional. She wears slacks instead of dresses, talks
back to her aunt, and resists attempts by her father’s law clerk to get her to
marry him and settle down into a small town, Southern, domestic role.
As is typical in a coming of age story, Jean Louise
encounters “evil” in the form of the racist pamphlet and speaker that her
father and boyfriend seem to be supporting.
As in such stories Jean Louise’s shock and outrage at the evil in the
world can lead her to cynicism and despair or into some kind of healthy maturation,
in which she comes to terms with and makes her peace with the world as it is
without sacrificing her own values and principles.
Although Jean Louise, having strung her boyfriend along,
finally and firmly rejects his offer of marriage, she does make peace with her
father. It is not clear whether she will
return to New York or stay in Maycomb and make her peace with the small town
provincialism that she despises.
Her Uncle Jack encourages her to stay, not to “join em,”
probably not to “beat em,” but possibly to improve them with her more
enlightened point of view. Paraphrasing
“Melbourne” (presumably Queen Victoria’s prime minister), Uncle Jack says, “the
time your friends need you is when they’re wrong.”
Uncle Jack emerges as the wise, if somewhat addled, sage,
advising Jean Louise, “…it takes a certain kind of maturity to live in the
South these days.” Perhaps it is the
same kind of maturity that enables us all to put up with the racist uncle who
always seems to show up for Thanksgiving.
In any case, it is no doubt healthier for Jean Louise to come
to some semblance of peaceful terms with her family and community, even if she
doesn’t stay there, than to become isolated and estranged from them.
Scattered through this coming of age narrative are three
flashbacks to Jean Louise’s childhood, episodes that reinforce the youthful
innocence from which she must “fall,” as in all coming of age stories. These flashbacks, taken by themselves, are
hilariously entertaining, though not necessarily well integrated with the
narrative as a whole. Reading them, one
can understand why her editor suggested she rewrite the manuscript from Scout’s
point of view as a young child.
So much for the “good.”
The “bad” is simply the rough draft quality of the text, structurally,
as suggested above, as well as in content and language. For one thing, 26 seems a bit old to be
discovering that her father is not the paragon of virtue she had thought him as
a child. Most of us experience this
disillusionment with, not only our parents, but also our family and community,
during our late teens or early twenties.
It doesn’t seem very credible that Jean Louise doesn’t discover her
father’s racism, even if it was more paternalistic than aggressive, at an
earlier age.
When she does confront her boyfriend and father, she is far
more virulent than one might expect.
Having just heard the Sunday preacher speak from the text of Isaiah 21:
6 (“For thus hath the Lord said unto me, Go, set a watchman, let
him declare what he seeth”), Jean Louise melodramatically declares that she
needed someone to “set a watchman” to warn her of the bigotry lying in
hiding beneath the moralistic façade of her father, family, and
community. Having grown up in the South,
surely she can’t be that shocked to find Southern racism and even the KKK
lapping at her own door.
The structure of the narrative is also flawed. The plot doesn’t really begin to thicken
until half way through, when Jean Louise discovers that pamphlet, and, as
suggested above the flashbacks are not well integrated. Much of the second half is taken up with long
inner and outer monologues and diatribes, as Jean Louise confronts herself and
others. Uncle Jack, a Faulkneresque
eccentric, tops all with his meandering, barely coherent, orations.
It is Uncle Jack that calls Jean Louise “Childe Roland,”
quoting parts of Robert Browning’s poem, lifting Jean Louise’s coming of age to
the mythic level of a hero’s quest narrative.
But it is also Uncle Jack who, shockingly, slaps Jean Louise
near the end, drawing blood and then plying her with whisky to ease the
pain. The ugly racism in the book is
countered by Jean Louise’s outrage, but this ugly act of violence is presented
uncritically. It is presented as
literally slapping some sense into an irate Jean Louise, and, more shockingly,
she accepts it. The only thing lacking
is her actually saying, “Thanks, I needed that.”
After this act of violence Jean Louise suddenly calms down,
accepts her uncle’s advice to make peace, apologizes to her father, and seems
to resign herself to the moral imperfection of her family, community, and the
world in general.
This resolution is consistent with the coming of age story,
but another, uglier, way to read the ending is as Harper Lee’s apologist
treatment of Southern racism. Atticus
attended a KKK meeting, not to participate, but to see who was under those
hoods. He attended the Citizen’s Council
meeting and listened to the racist speaker in order to maintain working
relationships with his fellow citizens.
He had the pamphlet in his desk in order to study the rhetoric and
reasoning of the segregationists. He
holds racist opinions, but is still a kind and forgiving father. Hank, as an up-and-coming lawyer who started
out as “trash,” cannot risk his upward social mobility by bucking the powers
that be.
Is this realism or is it apologism? You decide.
In any case, Go Set a
Watchman is not of the same caliber as To
Kill a Mockingbird. While there’s
some “good,” there’s more “bad,” and a lot more “ugly” than in the well-known
classic.
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