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Gone with the Wind:
Women, Race and Material Culture in the 20th Century seeks
to explore the influence of both the novel and the film since
the publication of the novel in 1936 and the first release of
the film in 1939, through documents and objects on loan to the
Kent State University Museum for this exhibition. The popularity
of these two works of the imagination does not mask their more
controversial aspects, particularly as they depict the complex
of American social relationships in the era of the Civil War.
Specifically, the
exhibition seeks to question the representation of these relationships
and how these representations have affected our perception of
ourselves historically and in the present moment. Written
by a woman born in 1900 and steeped in the tradition of the South
after Reconstruction, read and viewed by countless women since,
what is it in this story that still speaks so forcefully to women
of the late 20th century, and is the nature of the appeal the
same? The depiction of racial relations in both works has
always been offensive to African-Americans who have long fought
stereotypes found in the characterizations. Have these images
contributed to the current racial climate in the United States?
Finally, the exhibition explores the need to possess a piece of
this romance that has witnessed a continuing industry in Gone
with the Wind ephemera. Throughout the exhibition, documents
pertaining to the creation of the novel and the film serve to
emphasize the people who made the stuff of legend.
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