

There is the gumption of characters like Scarlett O’Hara who would brazenly spit the world in the face and sell her soul to survive. This is because ‘Gone with the Wind’ has complexities to this gumption which makes one survivor different from another.

Mitchell might have oversimplified this quality of survivors she called gumption in her remark. At any upheaval to society such as war, the normal order of things is destroyed and people begin afresh from an equal playing ground, then some people rise to the top while some others do not. Mitchell once remarked that ‘ Gone with the Wind’ is a novel about those who have gumption and those who don’t. How accomplishments that seem very important to society in times of peace and stability become useless for survival in the harsh face of war. Margaret Mitchell shows how different life and values are in times of peace from times of war.

Gumption and Survival in Gone with the Wind While it has a relatively simplistic writing style and does not contain the most enjoyable of dialogues, it makes up for these shortcomings by being a compelling story of human struggles in difficult circumstances. The story has sixty-three(63) chapters and is divided into five(5) parts, all of which follow a chronological order. It is a very long read that requires patience from readers to understand the detailed picture it tries to paint. It follows Scarlett O’Hara’s transition from a charming country girl whose only cares in the world were pretty dresses and handsome beaux, to a cold, hardened woman who would cheat, steal, murder, and numb her conscience to every value she once thought sacred in a bid to survive and escape starvation. Gone with the Wind is a book about how war, starvation, and adversity can reduce one’s humanity to the basest instinct for survival at all costs.
