AMST 430
MICHAEL R. H. SWANSON Ph. D 
The South
OFFICE: Feinstein College 111
ROGER WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY
Hours: M, T, Th, F 9:00-10:00 
SB 108
Or By Appointment 
T-Th 11:00-12:30
PHONE: (254)-3230
Spring, 2001

Week of March 26, 2001


Welcome back from Spring Break. I hope you had a memorable time. I had a major attack of put-it-off disease, and I don't have the website for the week done... Where did the time go? I also am not quite finished with your papers, though with a little luck and if my stamina doesn't give out I'll have them ready to hand out to you at the film this evening. YUP... tonight is "To Kill a Mockingbird" in the Penny Arcade Series.
 

"To Kill a Mockingbird (1962) is a much-loved, critically-acclaimed, classic trial film, a dramatic tour-de-force of acting, a portrayal of childhood innocence, and a progressive, enlightened 60s message about racial prejudice, moral tolerance and courage. The Academy Award winning screenplay was faithfully adapted by screenwriter Horton Foote from the 1960 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same name by Harper Lee - who had written a semi-autobiographical account of small-town Southern life. Lee grew up in Monroeville, Alabama where an almost identical copy of the courtroom in the film exists.

The film was nominated for eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture (losing to Lawrence of Arabia (1962)), Best Director (Robert Mulligan), Best Supporting Actress (Mary Badham), Best B/W Cinematography (Russell Harlan), and Best Music Score - Substantially Original (Elmer Bernstein). It was honored with three awards - Gregory Peck won a well-deserved Best Actor Award for his solid performance as a courageous Alabama lawyer, Horton Foote won the Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar, and the team of Art Directors/Set Decorators also received the top honor." For a complete synopsis of the film visit http://www.filmsite.org/toki.html
 

For Thursday, March 29
 

Thursday we'll spend about half the class discussing the film. The film is set in the depression era, but was created at the beginning of the modern civil rights era. One thing which we'll want to consider is whether the film is more representative of 1930s views or 1960s views.
 

The rest of the class I'd like to spend working with a short story from your book, Growing up in the South.  The story is Harry Crews, "A Childhood: The Biography of a Place" pp. 3-19. As you read it I'd like to have you think about how children acculturate into the southern community. You may want to compare the children in the story with the children in To Kill A Mockingbird. How does Atticus Finch try to resist the acculturating forces in his community?
 

For More Information about Harry Crews visit http://www.levee67.com/crews/