Excellent, excellent point. I can't wait for the PC types here to try to rebut it (they won't, but will instead try to spin the debate back to how "the old south revisionists see this film as a portrayal of things the way they ought to be.")
In other words, it seems the anti-Song-of-the-South crowd is just as guilty of stereotyping (ergo, all supporters of re-releasing the film are bigots living in the 1940s) as they claim their "opposition" is.
Oh gosh. You quoted me there so now I feel compelled to reply to it. OK. There are some misunderstandingsand presumptions there so let me point them out I guess.
First, "anti-song of the south." I guess that's me, which is strange because I am not anti-song-of-the-south. I think I mentioned that I own a copy; I own an original from the UK and the copy of that I legally made to play on my US player. I am not sure if I mentioned that I think that the movie has both artistic and historical merit, but I am quite sure that I did say it could be a wonderful teaching tool. Hell, there are things about the movie that I really like.
Second, big problem with your whole perception here. PC crowd? Claiming the "opposition" is bigots. ***.
I didn't say for a minute that everyone who watches the film or enjoys the film is a bigot. Think about it - I said I have the film. Jeez.
Look. What I said was that there are people out there who ARE old south revisionists who believe in a glorified fancifal version of an old south that never was. Look. I have watched college students parade through Auburn in confederate uniforms and scarlett Ohara dresses. I've known of preschoolers who awaken from nightmares crying "don't let the yankees get me." Do a simple web search and you will find many of these revisionist sites. Look. I am so proud to be a southerner, and I always will be, but that doesn't mean I can't see through the balony of that revisionistic view, probably only the way a southerner can I guess. That's the mindset I was talking about, and if you can't understand that my saying that old south revisionists will watch this movie and think about it warmly as "the way things ought to be" isn't implying that anyone who watches, wants to watch, or loves this movie is a old south revisionist, or as you put it, a 1940's bigot, I don't know what to tell you. I think you have some sort of chip on your shoulder, because you wrote a lot more into what I said than what I wrote. Now here, I have to say that I assuming that you are talking about me since you quoted me, if you are trying to make some more general point about some generalized "PC crowd" then never mind what I just said, I guess.
FWIW, I agree with what AV said (as usual) but I always took the movie as being after the war. I thought the black families and the poor white family were all share croppers. I thought it was during hte reconstruction. I'm adding that because of the "Excellent point" part. As Patricia Turner wrote:
Joel Chandler Harris set his stories in the post-slavery era, but Disney's version seems to take place during a surreal time when Blacks lived on slave quarters on a plantation, worked diligently for no visible reward and considered Atlanta a viable place for an old Black man to set out for.