LauraMax
Cathlete
OK since it's been about 17 or 18 years since I last read it, I'm gonna offer some random thoughts about things I don't remember the first 2 times around.
First, let's get the unpleasantness out of the way. I don't remember being so uncomfortable w/Mitchell's portrayal of slavery. She's clearly trying to justify it to those who didn't grow up with it. I find it very hard to believe slaves lived such gentle, easy lives. Crap, she makes ME want to be a slave at Tara! She makes it seem as though slaves ruled plantations instead of their owners, & that slaves manipulated their masters/mistresses into doing whatever they wanted. She pretty much says it outright in many scenes w/Gerald--how he went to Twelve Oaks to buy his butler's new wife b/c his butler asked him to, and also bought her daughter as well b/c Dilcey asked him to. Oh brother.
I think there's a lot more of this throughout the book, esp. w/Mammy. My intro makes the point that Mitchell was trying to discredit Uncle Tom's Cabin. I'm not entirely sure which is more realistic, but I have a hunch it was Uncle Tom's Cabin. 
Second, more fun stuff--I think the character of Scarlett is supposed to represent the battle between the old south & the new south. Mitchell spends a lot of time in the beginning describing Gerald & Ellen. Gerald, the immigrant, hard working & newly wealthy & Ellen, the Old South pedigreed who's supposed to live a life of liesure. So they created Scarlett, who wants to be a real lady like Ellen, but is really going through the motions like Gerald. You see a tomboy vs. a lady, new vs. old, Irish vs. French, crassness vs. class. Lots of conflict in young Scarlett.
Those are my initial thoughts. Feel free to expand.
First, let's get the unpleasantness out of the way. I don't remember being so uncomfortable w/Mitchell's portrayal of slavery. She's clearly trying to justify it to those who didn't grow up with it. I find it very hard to believe slaves lived such gentle, easy lives. Crap, she makes ME want to be a slave at Tara! She makes it seem as though slaves ruled plantations instead of their owners, & that slaves manipulated their masters/mistresses into doing whatever they wanted. She pretty much says it outright in many scenes w/Gerald--how he went to Twelve Oaks to buy his butler's new wife b/c his butler asked him to, and also bought her daughter as well b/c Dilcey asked him to. Oh brother.
Second, more fun stuff--I think the character of Scarlett is supposed to represent the battle between the old south & the new south. Mitchell spends a lot of time in the beginning describing Gerald & Ellen. Gerald, the immigrant, hard working & newly wealthy & Ellen, the Old South pedigreed who's supposed to live a life of liesure. So they created Scarlett, who wants to be a real lady like Ellen, but is really going through the motions like Gerald. You see a tomboy vs. a lady, new vs. old, Irish vs. French, crassness vs. class. Lots of conflict in young Scarlett.
Those are my initial thoughts. Feel free to expand.