I sometimes get obsessed with certain podcasts, and one of my recent favorites was âUnspooled.â I was shocked and saddened when the show got to âGone with the Wind.â While the podcast hosts differed on how racist the film was, both of them had plenty of praise for it and agreed it belonged on the AFI list.
I wrote a short note responding to the episode for the âUnspooledâ Facebook group but my post was declined and I got this message back from the Admin of the page: âIâm sorry but the group has proved recently that they are not in a place to have mature conversation about this. Itâs already been discussed a lot, and any new posts are going to cause more drama and more fighting.â
Film discussions shouldnât shy away from drama. So I decided to post what I was going to write for the âUnspooledâ page here.
âGone With the Windâ by Margaret Mitchell is a racist movie based on a racist book by a racist author. The movie, the book and the author helped popularized dangerous lies about the Southâthat blacks enjoyed their enslavement (untrue), that slavesholders were benevolent (they werenât), and that the Civil War was about maintaining a romantic way of life (the so-called âLost Causeâ) when it was actually about maintaining slavery.
After the release of her novel âGone with the Wind,â Mitchell responded to a fan letter from Thomas Dixon, author of âThe Clansman,â the hateful book that inspired the racist film âBirth of a Nation.â âDear Mr. DixonâŚI was practically raised on your books, and love them very much,â she replied to him. âFor many years I have had you on my conscience, and I suppose I might as well confess it now.â In âGone with the Wind,â the Klan kills âa negro who had boasted of rapeâ so his white victim doesnât have to testify in courtâand the lynching is portrayed sympathetically. (Note: I first learned a lot of the historical material in this post from reading âThe Wind Goes On: Gone with the Wind and the Imagined Geographies of the American South,â a dissertation by Virginia Tech instructor Taulby H. Edmondson.)
Blacks in âGone with the Windâ are described in racist, insulting ways. Mitchell calls blacks âscarcely one generation out of the African jungles.â Mammyâs face is described as having âthe uncomprehending sadness of a moneyâs face.â When Scarlett and the once-enslaved Big Sam are reunited after the Civil War, Mitchell writes that âhis watermelon-pink tongue lapped out, his whole body wiggled, and his joyful contortions were as ludicrous as the gambolings of a mastiff.â Blacks in the movie, like Butterfly McQueenâs character Prissy, are just as crudely drawn. âI hated that role,â McQueen once said. âI thought the movie was going to show the progress black people had made, but Prissy was lazy and stupid and backward. She needed to be slapped.â
The movieâs entertainment value, if there is any, canât possibly outweigh the actual harm the movie has done in helping to spread stereotypes and justify racial terror and segregation.
Malcolm X hated âGone With the Windâ and said its stereotypes made him feel like âcrawling under the rug.â James Baldwin called the movie obscene and argued that it promoted âthe myth of the happy darky.â
Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates, Jr., once wrote âI distinctly remember when I first saw the film. I was 17 years old, and I was astonished as I sat in a movie theater in Keyser, West Virginia, to see the white patrons weep loudly at the death of âThe Old South.â If you are a black person, as I am, the death of âThe Old Southâ meant the liberation of oneâs ancestors! It is an occasion for celebration. And the embarrassing depictions of characters such as Mammy and the character played by Butterfly McQueenâŚhave taken decades for black authors to overcome.â
The black press recognized âGone with the Windâ as racist propaganda from its release in 1939. In the Washington Tribune, Black poet Melvin B. Tolson wrote that ââGone with the Windâ is more dangerous than âBirth of a Nation.ââ He blasted it as nothing more than âanti-Negro, anti-Yankee, KKK propagandaâŚa falsification of historyâŚâThe Birth of a Nationâ was such a barefaced lie that a moron could see through it. âGone with the Windâ is such a subtle lie that it will be swallowed as truth by millions of whites and blacks alike.â
In 1805, abolitionist Samuel Wood published a broadsheet cataloging first-person accounts of some of the atrocities of slavery. Enslaved men and women were routinely and systematically raped, their families broken apart and their children sold. Enslaved people were branded with red hot irons and tortured with the drippings of molten lead. Pregnant enslaved women were whipped so severely that they died of their wounds. Enslaved people were âput into the stocks, a cattle chain of sixty or seventy pounds weight put on them, and a large collar round their necks, and a weight of fifty-six pounds fastened to the chain, when they were driven afield: the collars are formed with two, three, or four projections, which hinder them from lying down to sleep.â
I can see why some people embrace âGone with the Windâ despite its flawsâitâs a film with a feisty female protagonist at its center and thatâs a powerful lure. The movie also pushes racial buttons we might not even realize are being pushedâwe may think weâre responding to the filmâs sweeping âromanceâ when really weâre giving into something deeper and uglier and possibly unacknowledged within us. Pulitzer-prize winning critic Margo Jefferson once offered this advice for watching âGone with the Windâ: âWatch it well armed with political, social and race history, and approach it as real critics of how film manipulates, how it can turn even your own impulses and instincts against you.â
Critics who embrace âGone with the Windâ have to ask themselvesâwhy are you entertained by this film despite the fact that many Black people (as well as people of other races) see it as an attack on our humanity? What is in your soul that finds slavery, rape and racism as something romantic and entertaining? Why are you so in love with a racist film that you feel a need to honor it above all the films by women and people of color that have a better claim to be honored?
Iâm hoping that âUnspooledâ does a follow-up episode and talks to an expert in African-American history and the Reconstruction era to put âGone with the Windâ in the proper social and historical context.
Wood wrote at the end of his antislavery pamphlet: âLet now every honest man lay his hand on his breast, and seriously reflect, whether he is justifiable in countenancing such barbarities; or whether he ought not to reject, with horror, the smallest participation in such infernal transactions.â
âGone with the Wind,â by promoting slavery, is a participant in these âinfernal transactions.â Critics who embrace this movie are part of the same cruel legacy.