Maegen's Reviews > The Help
The Help
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While it was a well-written effort, I didn't find it as breathtaking as the rest of the world. It more or less rubbed me the wrong way. It reads like the musings of a white woman attempting to have an uncomfortable conversation, without really wanting to be uncomfortable. It's incredibly hard to write with integrity about race and be completely honest and vulnerable. The author failed to make me believe she was doing anything beyond a show & tell. And if her intent isn't anything greater, then it makes this book all the more pandering to the white imagination of what it must have been like to be "the help" during that era. It's passive self-reflection at best and utterly useless.
The national fascination with this book makes me sick. It makes me think of my grandmother who was "the help" to many white families for well over 50 years. Her stories aren't too different from those told in this book, but they are hers to tell. If she were alive today, I don't believe she would praise Stockett's book. In fact, I think she we would be horrified at the thought that her years of hard work (in some cases, for some very horrible people) would be reduced to some wannabe feel good story of the past.
The national fascination with this book makes me sick. It makes me think of my grandmother who was "the help" to many white families for well over 50 years. Her stories aren't too different from those told in this book, but they are hers to tell. If she were alive today, I don't believe she would praise Stockett's book. In fact, I think she we would be horrified at the thought that her years of hard work (in some cases, for some very horrible people) would be reduced to some wannabe feel good story of the past.
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Reading Progress
August 7, 2010
– Shelved
March 15, 2011
– Shelved as:
audiobooks
March 16, 2011
–
Started Reading
March 18, 2011
–
25.0%
March 30, 2011
–
50.0%
April 6, 2011
–
75.0%
April 12, 2011
–
90.0%
April 14, 2011
–
100.0%
April 14, 2011
–
Finished Reading
July 13, 2011
– Shelved as:
disappointments
July 23, 2011
– Shelved as:
recommended-to-me
Comments Showing 1-50 of 56 (56 new)
message 1:
by
jo
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Apr 16, 2011 06:29PM

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Unless you are wealthy or retired and do not work we are all someone's "Help".






@Cindi a few of my favorites are the Alchemy of Race and Rights, From Mammy to Miss America and Beyond, Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination





@Rhi: Thanks!


But that's just one opinion.

Just an idealist trying to point out the positive!

"It's hard to believe that so many people would see The Help as the better book or with a better insight into racism in the US. What accounts for the difference? Let me speculate that the appeal of this book is that it has one more white character who initiates the reconciliation of the races; that is, it's another example of a story shouldering the "White Man's Burden." And it's another story that provides a point of identification with a white protagonist which partly accounts for it's wild popularity among the white readers who make up a majority of the nation's readership."

@Martin: Thanks fror sharing, great review!

Empathy is progress if it comes from people who never had empathy for their Black help in the first place!
Empathy does not mean much for minority to empathize with a fellow minority but for the white majority in the south who use to have maids it is a big deal.
Small steps lead to bigger ones in the future!

." And it's another story that provides a point of identification with a white protagonist which partly accounts for it's wild popularity among the white readers who make up a majority of the nation's readership."
Thanks for stating the obvious! People will identify more with characters who are like themselves; DUH!
Why do you think that the Invisible Man by Ellison was first a favorite among Black Americans; b/c it spoke to the anger they were feeling.


I think I've just been insulted and you don't seem to be sincere in thanking me either. I'm a little surprised that this message comes from someone who's idealistic and likes to use the word "empathy."
I identified with the narrator in "Invisible Man" ("The Invisible Man" is by H. G. Wells) even though I'm a white man in my fifties who's never experienced bias because of my race. I identified with Santiago from "The Old Man and the Sea" even though I am not an old poor Cuban fisherman. I identified with Sethe in "Beloved" even though I've never been a slave woman. Surely, my point is "obvious" here; I can identify with others quite unlike me superficially because we all live on this one Earth with its joys and suffering. Those who flocked to this story, and it's mostly white women if goodreads is representative of its readership, found a convenient and shallow representative for their imaginative selves in Skeeter. If they had a broader sense of their identification with others, they might have read and appreciated the much better stories I've mentioned.

But you are in the minority, the majority of people will read books and empathize with only the characters who are like themselves.
All I am saying for those majority of people who never empathized with people outside their race or socio-economic status, a book like this serves as a first step to empathy toward black people. As we all know empathy is the first step toward social change.
As far as my comment towards Invisible Man goes. Initially, it was first a hit among black people and perhaps a few liberals because of its message of anger that was represented in it but only much later did it become a classic read and enjoyed by most.

I don't know the history of "Invisible Man's" readership. Maybe it was a hit with black people first, but it was awarded the National Book Award in 1953 after it was published, so it probably had a wide audience.

As far as the National Book Award goes, just because it won in 1953 does not mean it was widely read at that time. A book is chosen to win an award by 5 member committee of writers. So winning the National Book Award simply means that those 5 members who critiqued the book felt it was the best book that year. But winning the award does not necessarily guarantee that it was widely read by the general public until much later. People who tend to take note of National Book Awards tend to be literary inclined thus not your normal American person.









I noticed that the books you recommended to another reviewer are nonfiction, educational books. Are there any fictional stories about this topic that happen to tackle the subject matter to your liking? I ask because with an example it's easier to put a reviewer's taste/opinion into perspective.
