The main item that stood out to me in relation to these differing perspectives comes from the ways that Percy presents African Americans in the novel. Lancelot Lamar comes from an upper-class Southern family on the downside of its prominence. He still maintains African American servants, and they play a role in his life and his attempts to catch his wife cheating on him with a movie director. At one point, Lamar enlists Elgin to record his wife at night. Of Elgin, Lamar says,
An odd thought: I remember thinking at the time that nothing really changes, not even Elgin going from pickaninny to M.I.T. smart boy. For you see, even in doing that and not in casting about for a technical solution, he was still in a sense "my nigger"; and my watching him, waiting for him, was piece and part of the old way we had of ascribing wondrous powers to "them," if they were "ours."Lancelot deals with the deterioration of society, and specifically a Southern society. In this context, Percy's representation of Elgin makes sense. However, what is worth thinking about is how Percy's representations of African Americans differs from a writer such as Gaines. Both write about Louisiana and the South, so even though Gaines stated in 1986 that he hadn't really read Percy, they are still in conversation with one another.
For information of race in Percy's The Moviegoer, see:
MacKethan, Lucinda H. "Redeeming Blackness: Urban Allegories Of O'Connor, Percy, and Toole."
Studies in The Literary Imagination 27.2 (1994): 29-39. Print.
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