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PROFESSOR MELISSA HARRIS PERRY'S REVIEW OF FILM "THE HELP"

Richard Kigel · Friday, August 12th 2011 at 12:51PM · 4012 views
THE LAST WORD, August 10, 2011--The film adaptation of “The Help.” a novel about the lives and tensions between Mississippi white women and their African American maids, debuts this weekend, and amidst its release it has raised many questions and concerns about the way it portrays the lives of its black characters– though getting rave reviews fromOprah Winfrey and getting a screening at the White House.

Tulane Professor Melissa Harris Perry was one of the skeptics, who watched a screening of the movie today to review for Lawrence O’Donnell and found it so bad she jokingly demanded workers’ compensation for having watched it.

Harris Perry live-tweeted the experience today, making the movie sound nothing short of excruciating for someone who studies race relations for a living, finally concluding that it reduced the suffering of the women of the time to a “cat fight.”

She was much calmer on the matter on THE LAST WORD than Twitter, telling O’Donnell that she had gone home to calm down a bit as “it’s really easy to frame an African-American woman feminist talking about a feel-good happy race movie with a critical eye as a killjoy,” and wanted to make clear that the acting and immediate story was entertaining.

It was the periphery of that story that Harris Perry took issue with, arguing that “the African American domestic workers become props” for the white protagonist, and that it reduced the struggles of laborers in the South to light Hollywood fare.

“This is not a movie about the lives of black women,” she clarified, as their lives were not, she argued, “Real Housewives of Jackson, Mississippi… it was rape, it was lynching, it was the burning of communities.”

She then explained that it was, to her, completing the work started by the Daughters of the American Confederacy when they “found money in the federal budget to erect a granite statue of Mammy in the shadow of the Lincoln Memorial,” which happened while the same Senate contingency failed to pass the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill. “It is the same notion that the fidelity of black women domestics is more important than the realities of the lives, the pain, the anguish, the rape that they experienced.”

“It’s ahistorical and deeply troubling,” she argued, to make the suffering of these laborers a backdrop for a happy story.

But there was a silver lining to the film, and Harris Perry concluded on a good note: actress Viola Davis’s buzz was well-earned. “What kills me,” she concluded, “is that in 2011 Viola Davis is reduced to playing a maid.”

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Richard Kigel Staten Island, NY

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Comments (7)

Richard Kigel Friday, August 12th 2011 at 1:02PM

THANK YOU, IRMA.

You know it is because years of reading, research, study and actually living and working with the community has given me a profound respect for Black HIstory.

For me, it's real. It has deeply inspired me and I want the world to know how powerful it is!!!

Richard Kigel Friday, August 12th 2011 at 1:57PM

Thank you, Irma.

You know how much your kind words and encouragement means to me!!!

I am deeply humbled and grateful. And I always want to prove worthy of your support.

And if I ever fall short or screw up, I am sure you will let me know!!!

Richard Kigel Saturday, August 13th 2011 at 8:07AM

Well thank you!

As you said so beautifully...

"IT IS BETTER TO LIGHT A CANDLE THAN TO CURSE THE DARKNESS."

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

@ Rich, have I said lately how proud I am to call you "my brother" in Black culture.lol (smile)

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

...but, then Rich this movie just may pave the way to get the story out about Sister Rosa Parks even with the Teaparty now added to the BIA history taught on CNN that Sister Parks was not willing to give up her seat because "she was tired"...

tis wondeerful working class Black proud Back woman would neever give up her seat and had actually been let on the bus that day by a neew bus driver who did not know she had been BANNED from riding on any of thier public bus for this very reason...

even with us having a Black president even our community is still not ready for this kind fo BIA history as F-A-C-T...

IT WOULD ONLY VIOLATE OUR NEED TO PLAY THE VICTIM...(NUP)

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

lol must leave this beautiful teaching moment blog, because right now I find I can't be objective realizing you are one that we tried to run off our site!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!(N...U...P big time)

Thank you my favorite public school creative writting and critical thinking teacher. (smile)

ROBINSON IRMA Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM

@Rich, your Ground Zero posting just now is such a wonderful compliment to this blog. Life is itself an on going as well as progressing 'teaching moment' lol (smile)

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