Gone with the Wind
discussion
Abusive Relationship
date
newest »

message 51:
by
Cynthia
(new)
-
rated it 5 stars
Mar 05, 2013 11:12PM

reply
|
flag

Because most people don't think there is abuse?
IIRC Rhett encourages Scarlett to speak her mind, knows already that she has a girlish crush to Ashley, and Scarlett, even though she doesn't always like what Rhett has to say, has to admit that Rhett tells her the truth and respects him for that. For me that isn't abuse, just two strong-willed inviduals who are used to getting their way, always.

Because most people don't think there is abuse?
IIRC Rhett encourages Scarlett to speak her mind,..."
Thanks Tytti - not sure what IIRC means, but you have answered the question - a lot of people do not see the relationship abusive (which actually also applies to Twlight... go figure).
TBH when I first read the book I never said "that was an abusive relationship", I just didn't think it was a great one - I really wish I could recall where I read about it being interpreted as abusive so I could post a link, but it got me thinking that what some people see as abuse others don't.

Of course Rhett might sometimes act slightly patronizing but then again, he is 33 and Scarlett 16 when the book starts. In the end Scarlett has grown up but is still only 28 when Rhett is 45. In fact I always found Rhett to be supporting and sometimes even proud of Scarlett, even when other people were criticizing her. They weren't perfect people but perfect people are usually boring anyway.
Twilight doesn't interest me one bit but I quickly googled and found some posts about the issue. They do seem to bring up some points that for me sound like abuse. But then again I don't remember anything like that from GWTW. Of course GWTW is a book for adults and Twilight is for... non-adults... so that might affect how they are treated.

Of course Rhett might sometimes act slightly patronizing but then again, he is 33 and Scarlett 16 when th..."
Thanks for explaining IIRC.
Again you make a point I had not considered about the intended age range (I read both books when I was 17 so had not thought of that).
I think Cynthia says it quite well in her above post: ... Rhett and Scarlett's relationship isn't healthy. It's fueled by too much passion, the violent kind but at the same time he was incredibly supportive of her as you say when others weren't.
I believe another poster said that this was a realistic portrayl of a relationship from that period of time, as opposed to an idealised one.

I believe another poster said that this was a realistic portrayl of a relationship from that period of time, as opposed to an idealised one."
I wouldn't say it was realistic for its time, we have no way of knowing that anymore. In fact I doubt it, it might have been too modern. But in any case it felt more real because it wasn't idealized, well maybe a little.

You recall when Scarlett was getting drunk and Rhett comes..."
We don't really know what happened in that bedroom after Rhett carried Scarlett up the stairs because it's not written in the book. But the next day Scarlett wakes up happy and singing, and mentions that she reveled in what happened between them the night before. My take on it was that it was the first time Scarlett had actually enjoyed sex.



seeing this section quoted like this has changed my mind- I don't think it was rape.

No. She was definitely a willing participant ;)

I'm not saying it's okay! Don't misinterpret what I said. I was pointing out it wouldn't have been an unusual thing if he had. Remember it's the 1860s, women were still considered a man's property. I don't like it anymore than any other girl does, but it was what it was and the social norms would have allowed it.

I'm glad you posted this, Meghan. That was how I remembered the scene. I couldn't figure out where rape came from.
I actually do think of GWTW as a romance, although I realize it's much more than that alone. The character flaws and fights and misunderstandings in this book set up to be a great romance. Someone wrote earlier, if books were written about perfect relationships they'd be incredibly boring. I agree. Give me characters I want to shake! I read purely for entertainment, btw.



Yeah. I did.

I have noticed on some goodreads discussions that when some people are faced with similar circumstances in another book (particularly one that they didn't like) some tend to see very similar actions quite differently. For example, what about Tess of the D'urbeyvilles? People seem to be quite divided on whether Alex rapes her in the beginning. Scarlett and Rhett's relationship is justified as "violent and passionate". So is Heathcliff and Cathy's in Wuthering Heights, but the relationship in books like Fifty Shades of Grey, Twilight and Beautiful Disaster are generally considered abusive by those who are critics of them. When asked to justify their opinions, some of the justifications given are exactly the same elements that were present in GWTW or in Tess or in WH. Besides the times settings, the only difference to me seems that GWTW, Tess and WH are generally regarded as a classic novels.

Pauline, whether Scarlett enjoyed it or not, she absolutely was raped by a drunken Rhett.

Gone with the Wind was a period piece about war, relationships and redemption. Rhett and Scarlett were, each in their own way, representatives of the two sides of the battle. Abusive? Well, 1.1 million people died as a result of the conflict, which makes the "abuse" Ms Mitchell portrays through her characters look pretty tame in comparison to the big picture she was trying to convey.
Compare it to Twilight? Sorry, I never read Twilight. I did read FSoG, and I can't say it's fair to compare them. Aside from the writing in FSoG being juvenile in comparison, the subject matter can't be compared either. As best I could tell, FSoG was only about the sexual relationship between a high powered man and a naive girl. Taken in context, I really can't see a comparison at all.

I watched the movie first, and then I read the book; when ‘Scarlett’ came out I read it right away. After reading ‘Gone with the Wind’, I felt like I understood Scarlett and her decisions, I didn’t when I saw the movie. (No offense to the actors or director) I get why she married the men she did , (I get why she "boarded" her kids with her sister (to keep her sister and Tara in money. Had she just given money to her sister it would have been looked like charity and that did not fly back then.) She fought tooth and nail for Tara and her family (both by blood and by love), keeping it away from the tax men and carpet baggers AND keeping it running. She knew if Suellen had married Frank Kennedy that she would not be in a position to keep the whole lot of them going. (Only Suellen and Frank would have been alright had they married and from Franks business sense they would not have lasted long) Scarlett encouraged building and sold lumber, she ran the store and kept the books. I liked Frank but he was not the business man Scarlett was, if she had not been hampered by her womanhood I think she would have owned most of the county. As it was however she did the best she could with what she had available. I may not agree with her methods but I understand the intentions.
As for loving the blond dimwit Ashley, (sorry, even I don’t get the attraction here, he may have been pretty and an all-around good guy but, his lack of backbone and common sense kills it for me) well we can't help who we love nor can we always tell it from infatuation. It is clear early on Scarlett and Rhett are perfect for each other. He did not let her get away with most things and what he did let slide he told her to her face. 'I know and you know this is stupid and your spoiled but I think it is funny watching you scramble, even though I love you enough to never let you fall'.. She loved Mellie so much and took her responsibility to Mellie's last request so hard she let the whole town treat her badly because no one would have believed her anyway. Sure she could have left town and washed her hands of it just sending money to support Tara but that would not have fulfilled her promise as Ashley would have seen anything she did as Charity so she had to stay.
SPOILERS!!!!!!!!!!
Scarlett has our heroine ending up in Ireland trying to raise a daughter who she loves. Time has smoothed some of the edges from Scarlett but not so many that she is a different person. She goes through hell and I won't tell you the two big reveals but I will say I love her daughter...
‘Rhett’, (okay I am still reading this one... or I was before I misplaced the book.) this is as I recall (it has been a few months since I lost the book) takes place during part of GWTW and recounts what Rhett was thinking at specific points. How they fell in love, why he is who he is and why he is the perfect man for Scarlett.
GWTW is definitely NOT a 'romance' novel. Neither protagonist is near perfect. They have flaws and I think the reason it IS so popular and classic is because most people can identify with at least one person in the story. A spoiled girl with no cares who loses her entire world but fights like a wet cat to get it all back only to find it will never be the same, continues to fight to ensure no matter what she and hers would never be at the mercy of money again and through it all finds true love only to lose it???? Sounds damn interesting to this woman. LOL (yeah it's my favorite book.. lol)

You caught my eye with this one. Angry sex, if the woman decides she enjoyed it or at least was truly willing; "date rape" or real rape if she wakes up in the morning and decides she didn't and wasn't? How would the man actually know, until way too late?
He wouldn't, would he? It could be labeled anything, making him either a hero like Rhett -- or, as with today, a rapist and destroying his life.


In regards to the historical period, my problem is that the book seems to celebrate women as manipulative, objectified creatures (powerlessness leads to either passivity, shrewishness or both) and slavery as a not-so-bad state for clearly witless people who are better off being "taken care of."
I love the book anyway but these are real obstacles for me that stop me from rereading the book more often, especially as I get older for some reason.

Teresa wrote: ""The book caused some scandal in it's day (1936), because of the use of words like "damn" (gasp)and "whore"(heaven help us!). The New York Society for the Suppression of Vice objected to Scarlett b..."
Source? I'm interested in learning more!
Source? I'm interested in learning more!
Alex wrote: "I haven't read the book but seen the film a couple of times so have a vague idea what it's about.
Firstly I think there are other examples where relationships between men and women go beyond roman..."
You put some of the message the film failed to portray (at least without multiple observational rewatches)that was one of the central themes of the book.
But I really recommend you read it at least once, there are so many messages and commentaries that Mitchell brilliantly blends in with the plot and character development that you can't find in the movie. Its one of the book where if you even just reread your favorite scenes you'll find something new every time or at least find yourself pondering. I only read it once (this year) but each time I read the final chapter for example even without analyzing it I find myself pondering so much. Imagine what more in my future rereads of the book from cover-to-cover!
Read it when you have the chance and please tell me what messages you've spotted or what ideas and thoughts you developed from merely on completion of the book! I'd love to hear your take considering you already spotted one of the book's main themes from watching the movie a few times which alone is impressive.Many people watched the Selznick's adaptation like a thousand times but never get that message, thinking the story is all about the failed romance between Rhett and Scarlett (which never was the primary theme of the story in the first place).
Oh if you're interested I published three threads recently here on the discussion board that came to my head after rereading some scenes. They're not even scratching the surface of how complex and such a human story Gone With the Wind is!
Firstly I think there are other examples where relationships between men and women go beyond roman..."
You put some of the message the film failed to portray (at least without multiple observational rewatches)that was one of the central themes of the book.
But I really recommend you read it at least once, there are so many messages and commentaries that Mitchell brilliantly blends in with the plot and character development that you can't find in the movie. Its one of the book where if you even just reread your favorite scenes you'll find something new every time or at least find yourself pondering. I only read it once (this year) but each time I read the final chapter for example even without analyzing it I find myself pondering so much. Imagine what more in my future rereads of the book from cover-to-cover!
Read it when you have the chance and please tell me what messages you've spotted or what ideas and thoughts you developed from merely on completion of the book! I'd love to hear your take considering you already spotted one of the book's main themes from watching the movie a few times which alone is impressive.Many people watched the Selznick's adaptation like a thousand times but never get that message, thinking the story is all about the failed romance between Rhett and Scarlett (which never was the primary theme of the story in the first place).
Oh if you're interested I published three threads recently here on the discussion board that came to my head after rereading some scenes. They're not even scratching the surface of how complex and such a human story Gone With the Wind is!

1.the unlawful compelling of a person through physical force or duress to have sexual intercourse.
2.any act of sexual intercourse that is forced upon a person.
Rhett may have started the night on a forceful note but Scarlet LIKED that. If she hadn't have LIKED that, she wouldn't have woke up the next morning all smiles and sunshine, she was SINGING for goodness sakes. She may not have WANTED to have sex for her own selfish head strong reasons, but those reasons quickly fled after they started getting into it.
However, I am curious to know if Rhett WOULD have raped her, if she hadn't given in. To me that's a more interesting question. Not whether what happened was rape or not, since it wasn't. Women who are raped don't wake up the next day all happy like the sun is shinning out their ass and like they've been reinvigorated. Come on!
Anyways, to the posters original comment about why the abuse isn't talked about so much in GWTW.
I believe because the abuse wasn't one sided. Scarlet and Rhett were abusive to each other. This makes it seem less, I don't know the right word, but less serious I guess. Of course it isn't less serious, in fact it's doubly awful but you have to admit that when 2 people willingly abuse each other it's different than one dominating the other. Scarlet and Rhett both gave as good as they got.
I also feel that we HAVE to make allowances for a time period. To not do that is to not make allowances for another culture. It doesn't make things right. It's history though. Those who want to ignore history, I guess all the power to them. But can you imagine a character in an old book that's politically correct for our time? It just doesn't work. It's not real. I personally like realism. So when I read a book based upon an older time I don't expect the leading lady/man to be this awesome person who meets today's standards. I expect him to be very flawed, and not flawed from the ways of today either. I mean flawed with conceptions that have taken dozens if not hundreds of years for humans to work their way passed.




You recall when Scarlett was getting drunk and Rhett comes..."
She was also happy and contented the very next morning which seems strange if she was truly raped.



Calling it a rape scene is a bit much. The next morning, Scarlett reflects on the experience: "[he] used her brutally through a wild mad night and she had gloried in it."
She reflects on how a lady isn't supposed to enjoy sex, then admits to herself "stronger than shame was the memory of rapture, of the ecstasy of surrender. For the first time in her life she had felt alive, felt passion as sweeping and primitive as the fear she had known the night she fled Atlanta, as dizzy sweet as the cold hate when she had shot the Yankee."
The thought of her next meeting with Rhett has her nervous and excited.
This is not in any way the reaction of a rape victim.
all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic