Atticus Finch : the biography : Harper Lee, her father, and the making of an American icon / Joseph Crespino.
Publisher: New York : Basic Books, 2018Edition: First editionDescription: xx, 248 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781541644946 (hardcover)
- Lee, Harper
- Finch, Atticus (Fictitious character)
- Lee, Harper -- Family
- Lee, Harper. To kill a mockingbird
- Lee, Harper. Go set a watchman
- Lee, Harper -- Criticism and interpretation
- Authors, American -- 20th century -- Biography
- BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Literary
- HISTORY / United States / State & Local / South (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN, VA, WV)
- LITERARY CRITICISM / American / General
- 813/.54 B 23
- PS3562.E353 Z58 2018
- BIO007000 | HIS036120 | LIT004020
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NMC Library | Stacks | PS3562 .E353 Z58 2018 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001453561 |
Browsing NMC Library shelves, Shelving location: Stacks Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
No cover image available | ||||||||
PS3562 .E353 T6 2002 To kill a mockingbird / | PS3562 .E353 T6 2010 To kill a mockingbird / | PS3562 .E353 T645 2008 Racism in Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird / | PS3562 .E353 Z58 2018 Atticus Finch : the biography : Harper Lee, her father, and the making of an American icon / | PS3562 .E42 A6 2016 The unreal and the real : the selected short stories of Ursula K. Le Guin. | PS3562 .E42 A6 2016B Words are my matter : writings about life and books, 2000-2016 with a journal of a writer's week / | PS3562 .E42 D36 1989 Dancing at the edge of the world : thoughts on words, women, places / |
"Who was the real Atticus Finch? The publication of Go Set a Watchman in 2015 forever changed how we think about Atticus Finch. Once seen as a paragon of decency, he was reduced to a small-town racist. How are we to understand this transformation? In Atticus Finch, historian Joseph Crespino draws on exclusive sources to reveal how Harper Lee's father provided the central inspiration for each of her books. A lawyer and newspaperman, A. C. Lee was a principled opponent of mob rule, yet he was also a racial paternalist. Harper Lee created the Atticus of Watchman out of the ambivalence she felt toward white southerners like him. But when a militant segregationist movement arose that mocked his values, she revised the character in To Kill a Mockingbird to defend her father and to remind the South of its best traditions. A story of family and literature amid the upheavals of the twentieth century, Atticus Finch is essential to understanding Harper Lee, her novels, and her times"-- Provided by publisher.
"One of the most famous characters in all of American culture, Atticus Finch has long been regarded as a touchstone of decency and goodness. But that changed with the 2015 publication of Lee's long-hidden manuscript Go Set a Watchman, in which Atticus is portrayed not as the heroic defender of a wrongly accused black man but as a small-town southern racist. Many have tried to piece together the "real" Atticus, and to determine how and why Harper Lee would have created two such seemingly different versions of the same character. The best way to understand Atticus, as the award-winning historian Joseph Crespino explains, is to examine the life of the flesh-and-blood man who inspired him: Harper Lee's father, Amasa Coleman (A. C.) Lee. In Atticus Finch, Crespino has unearthed a variety of new sources that show how Harper Lee's views were formed in tension with her father's, and how she used his example, even while smoothing over its rough edges, to create an enduring icon. From 1929 to 1947 A. C. Lee was the part-owner and sole editor of the lone newspaper in Monroeville, Alabama. On display in Lee's editorials were all the attributes commonly associated with Atticus: integrity, idealism, and a vigorous opposition to political demagoguery, whether that meant mob rule in Alabama or fascism in Hitler's Germany. Yet Lee was also a white southerner of his time and place, and his growing opposition to the New Deal and the emerging civil rights movement informed the character his daughter conceived in Watchman"-- Provided by publisher.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 189-230) and index.
There are no comments on this title.