To Kill a Mockingbird
discussion
Capote wrote mockingbird?
date
newest »


but it is still her book.

What an ugly racist thing to say, as if only 'white' people are capable of racist behaviour. All races everywhere have racist tendencies including blacks and Asians and Hispanics.
To Kill a Mockingbird succeeded in America because white people published the book, white people sold the book and white people bought the book. Doesn't sound racist to me. Sounds like white people like a good read.



To Kill a Mockingbird succeeded in America because white people published the book, white people sold the book and white people bought the book. Doesn't sound racist to me. Sounds like white people like a good read."
Huh? You sound like you don't think black people like a good read, is that what you are saying? Are you incapable of understanding the context of the story and the time period it was written in? Do you understand your history, or are you an insensitive clod.

Apparently White Supremacy is alive and well.


It's an interesting question.
I'm no scholar of Capote, though I've read a good amount of his work. In Cold Blood and the whole Tiffany's thing, plus a bunch of shorter works....
(Side note: the idea that Capote's work has been interpreted in film better than Lee's is patently absurd. I like Audrey as much as the next guy, but anybody who watches that movie and thinks George Peppard captured his role is off their nut, and I've got two words to get that last nail in the coffin: Mickey Rooney. Youch.)
Anyway, I think I'd sum this up in abstract terms. Where Lee is a kind of idealist, Capote is a fantasist. That is, Lee wrote something very close to home, and expressed a lot of idealistic concepts. Capote had no such interest--except maybe where his own smaller, personal world was concerned. His writing was much more personal. He wrote fantasy versions of his world, and the characters that he wrote well were versions of himself, or people he could see himself in. Lee was writing about people that were very different from herself, and--arguably--she idealizes them in her work.
Again, those are abstractions, so you can take or leave them. However, I would suggest that as abstractions they illustrate part of the problem with the argument that Capote had anything to do with writing To Kill a Mockingbird. Mockingbird is a "larger" work than anything Capote attempted, even his masterwork In Cold Blood. Even if Capote weren't elbows deep in his own work at the time Lee was writing her book, the core themes in them are very different, and they are as unlike one another in scope as Fitzgerald was from Hemingway.
all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic
It is her book alone.