![]() HBO Max’s move came a day after The Los Angeles Times published an opinion piece by John Ridley, the screenwriter of “Twelve Years a Slave,” criticizing “Gone With the Wind” for its racist stereotypes and whitewashing of the horrors of slavery, and calling for it to be presented only with added historical context. But they have seen it - just not in its original form.” “People will say they haven’t seen the movie. “You want to have a Southern antebellum wedding - where does that come from?” said Kellie Carter Jackson, a historian at Wellesley College who teaches a course on slavery and film. And for every prominent conservative accusing HBO Max of censorship, there were plenty on social media calling the movie, well, boring.īut the 1939 classic - still the highest-grossing film of all time, adjusted for inflation - has enduringly shaped popular understanding of the Civil War and Reconstruction perhaps more than any other cultural artifact. “Gone With the Wind” may register with younger people today only as their grandmother’s favorite movie (or maybe, the source of a lacerating joke that opens Spike Lee’s “BlacKkKlansman”). ![]() ![]() When HBO Max announced Tuesday that it was temporarily removing “Gone With the Wind” from its streaming service, it seemed as if another Confederate monument was coming down. ![]()
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