Females' attitude toward love and marriage in Gone with the Wind.doc
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1、Females attitude toward love and marriage in Gone with the Wind1. IntroductionMargaret Mitchells Gone with the Wind is considered to be one of the most popular novels and movies of all the time. It is the Pulitzer Prize winner of 1936. People continue to watch the adapted film and fantasize about th
2、is novel almost seventy years after it was written. Mitchells work relates the story of a rebellious Southern belle named Scarlett OHara and her experiences with friends, family, lovers, and enemies before, during, and after the Civil War. Through describing Scarletts life, Mitchell examined the eff
3、ect of the war on the old order of the South, and the aftermath of the war on what was left of the southern planter class. The novel is set in North Georgia at the time of the American Civil War, from 1861 to 1865 and beyond when the Southern plantation owners fought the northern Yankees for the rig
4、ht to own slaves. They lost the war, suffered innumerable losses of life in the process, and the romantic plantation life depicted in the early chapters of the novel was utterly destroyed. During this period the characters in the novel had to undergo the transition from a carefree playful life of pi
5、cnics and parties (underlain by the hard graft of their slaves) to one of hand-to-mouth living with hard physical labor, and finally, back to prosperity. This paper describes Margaret Mitchells environment of personal growth, life experience, marriage and other aspects of emotional description, and
6、her creative process of this immortal work, as well as inspiration for writing and writing background, and combined with the characteristics of the heroine Scarletts personality as well as her view of love and marriage. It has a further explore the awaking of self-consciousness about marriage and sp
7、irit of seeking autonomous right about life. The authors experience in emotion and thought established foundation for this works. 2. Biography of Margaret MitchellMargaret Mitchell was born on Nov. 8, 1900 in Atlanta to a family with ancestry not unlike the OHaras in Gone with the Wind. Her mother,
8、Mary Isabelle “Maybelle” Stephens was of Irish-Catholic ancestry. Her father, Eugene Muse Mitchell, an Atlanta attorney, descended from Scotch-Irish and French Huguenots. The family included many soldiers-members of the family had fought in the American Revolution, Irish uprisings and rebellions and
9、 the Civil War. The imaginative child was fascinated with stories of the Civil War that she heard first from her parents and great aunts, who lived at the familys Jonesboro rural home, and later, from grizzled (and sometimes profane) Confederate veterans who regaled the girl with battlefield stories
10、 as Margaret, astride her pony, rode through the countryside around Atlanta with the men. The family lived in a series of homes, including a stately home on Peachtree Street beginning in 1912.Margaret Mitchell had always been physically active but fragile. In order to play with her brother, Stephens
11、, and the other boys in the neighborhood, Margaret quickly became a tomboy. She dressed in knickers and called herself Jimmy. She wrote, produced, and directed plays, casting her friends and inviting the neighborhood over. The front parlor rooms of her home were perfect staging areas. Young Margaret
12、 attended private school, but was not an exceptional student. When, on one memorable day, she announced to her mother that she could not understand mathematics and would not return to school, Maybelle dragged her daughter to a rural road where plantation houses had fallen into ruin. Margaret fell in
13、 love with Lt. Clifford Henry who was a Harvard man in training at Camp Gordon in Atlanta. They quickly engaged. Margaret started her first year at Smith College in the fall of 1918. While at Smith College, she received word that Clifford was dead. Soon after, her mother became ill, and Margaret rus
14、hed home to see her but did not make it in time. Chastened, Margaret Mitchell returned to school, eventually entering Smith College in the fall of 1918, not long after the United States entered World War I. Her fianc, Clifford Henry, was killed in action in France. In January 1919, Maybelle Mitchell
15、 died during a flu epidemic and Margaret Mitchell left college to take charge of the Atlanta household of her father and her older brother, Stephens. Although she made her society debut in 1920, Margaret was far too free-spirited and intellectual to be content with the life of a debutante. She quarr
16、eled with her fellow debs over the proper distribution of the money they had raised for charity, and she scandalized Atlanta society with a provocative dance that she performed at the debutante ball with a male student from Georgia Tech.By 1922, Margaret Mitchell was surrounded by suitors, but two m
17、en remained the top competitors for her attention, an ex-football player and bootlegger, Berrien Red Upshaw, and a lanky newspaperman, John R. Marsh. She chose Upshaw, and they were married in September and the couple moved in with Margarets family. Upshaws irregular income led her to seek a job, at
18、 a salary of $25 per week, as a writer for The Atlanta Journal Sunday Magazine where Marsh was an editor and her mentor. Shortly thereafter, Upshaw became abusive, and Margaret realized he was both a bootlegger and an alcoholic. The two separated and eventually divorced. Margaret landed a job as a r
19、eporter at the Atlanta Journal Magazine. Their marriage was stormy and short. They divorced in October 1924, and less than a year later, she married Marsh. The two held their wedding reception at their new ground-floor apartment at 17 Crescent Avenue a house which Margaret affectionately nicknamed “
20、The Dump.” Only months after their marriage, Margaret left her job at the Journal to convalesce from a series of injuries. It was during this period that she began writing the book that would make her world famous. 3. Writing Gone with the Wind and Its SuccessMargaret was forced to quit her job at t
21、he newspaper because of arthritis in her ankles and feet. She spent time at home in bed, reading voraciously. John, tired of lugging books home for Margaret to read, brought her a second-hand portable Remington typewriter with the words, Madam, I greet you on the beginning of a great new career. Joh
22、ns thought was that because Margaret had read basically every book in the public library, she should write her own book. Margaret began composing what her friends jokingly call, the great American novel, writing about what she had learned from the stories her elders had told her as she was growing u
23、p. The bulk of her work was completed. Only two people, John and her friend Lois Cole, who worked for Macmillan Publishing Company, knew the details of her writing. Margaret and John moved from the Crescent Avenue Apartments to the Russell Apartments at Peachtree on 17th Street. Lois Cole asked Marg
24、aret to show Latham around Atlanta. Margaret agreed to meet Latham but repeatedly refused his requests to see her manuscript. After an acquaintance cattily remarked to her that she was not serious enough to be a writer, Margaret finally gave in, gathering up her tattered manuscript and driving it ov
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