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The Irony Behind The Secret Life
of Bees
by Laura Major

On the surface, Sue Monk Kidd's 2002 New York Times best
seller The Secret Life of Bees tells the story of Lily Owens, a young
teen-aged Caucasian girl learning the lessons of love and family in the Civil
Rights era of South Carolina 1964. Adapted to the screen and ready for a
mid-October 2008 release, the preponderance of African American supporting
characters enduring the treachery of the South during the Civil Rights era would
lead those unfamiliar with the story to believe it's another "We Shall Overcome"
redemption saga.
As Director and Screenwriter Gina Prince-Bythewood put it
when Ella Curry, Literary Publicist and CEO of EDC Creations asked about the
book's appeal for a movie adaptation, the director said, "It starts with the
story. I wanted to tell this story...I knew that the story and the themes were
universal."
Indeed the themes of family, community, respect, and
spiritual awakening in The Secret Life of Bees applies to everyone.
While these concepts have been covered in many literary
works, the origin of this story is like no other. Rarely is the era of Civil
Rights explored from the perspective of a Caucasian teenager, Lily Owens played
by Sam I Am star Dakota Fanning, who is an outward African American
sympathizer. So outward are Lily's connections to the African American southern
community that she leaves her abusive father after the death of her mother and
discovers her life's lessons amid her African American nanny played by Dream
Girls Oscar-winner Jennifer Hudson, and the bee-farming African American
Boatwright sisters who board them. The story belongs to the Boatwright sisters
as much as it belongs to Lily as they survive that turbulent time together.
Prince-Bythewood continues, "...to bring the Boatwright sisters to life, like we
just don't see women like that and I wanted to be the one to be able to do that.
I felt it was a gift."
The real irony comes in the fact that these interracial
relationships and the damage of racism that is felt across color lines were not
solely drawn up from the depths of the author's imagination. When Sue Monk Kidd
was asked how she came up with the story's perspective, she replied, "I was
pulling from both imagination and memory. I grew up in a small town in Georgia
so I came of age in the '60s...It was a time I think when it was just very
volatile and very vivid and I remember it deeply." While Lily's plight is not
autobiographical to Monk Kidd's experience, the emotion, the symbolism as well
as certain occurrences like bees making honey in the walls of her childhood
bedroom is true to her memory.
The Secret Life of Bees shakes up the perspectives that
surround the Civil Rights Era demonstrating the dangers and injustices that
existed for many daring to blur the color line in search of self-acceptance and
belonging.
Listen to the live
interview
About Laura Major: Laura
Major is a multicultural fiction author and freelance writer residing in the
greater Phoenix area of Arizona. Her first novel, Mismatched was
published by Amira Press in February of 2008. Laura also manages a multicultural
website, Sable Lit Reviews.com, one of the few of its kind providing commentary
on the multicultural impact of current events as well as multicultural book
reviews.
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