“Jacqueline Kennedy: Historic Conversations on Life with John  Kennedy” has hit the bookstores and her daughter, Caroline Kennedy is hitting the TV circuit to promote the book. At the same time, Diane Sawyer has shown two episodes of the tapes released from the Jacqueline Kennedy interviews with Kennedy aide Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., just 4 months after the Kennedy assassination.

What strikes me the most about Jacqueline Kennedy is how demur she is and how very much she fit into the 50’s mold of the not so modern woman. Her roll as a wife was much closer to my mother’s roll as a wife than I would have imagined. Women in those days very much defined themselves through their husbands and for their husbands. As I watched the Sawyer shows I wanted to spring up through the TV and bellow at Jackie and tell her she was her own person. She was a “stand by your man” kind of woman and it was totally apparent in the interviews.

Jackie became a more independent woman as she aged. She metaphorsized more from a woman who was there to enhance and build up her husband to one who was her own person with her own identity. Caroline Kennedy had the sole responsibility of deciding whether to release the information in the interviews. She decided to release it all. What a gift she has given us with the bird’s eye look  into the lives of the two people who redefined the modern presidency in America. Jackie may become better known for her role as national historian than glamorous first lady. 

3 Thoughts to “Jackie we hardly knew ye”

  1. Raymond Beverage

    I for one am glad Caroline Kennedy was the one to release it….no spin, no junk as someone else might have.

    “think back to all the tales you heard of Camelot….don’t let it be forgot, that once there was a spot, for one brief shining moment, that was known as Camelot”

  2. And we couldn’t stand it so we killed it. So much for happy endings.

  3. George S. Harris

    I dearly loved Jacqueline Kennedy and you are right MH, she did so fit the mold of the not so modern woman. I cannot help but believe that she knew of Jack’s philandering, yet she rose above it and was what I would call, “A great lady.” She did keep the Camelot flame alive and, in many ways those brief years were Camelot reborn. I don’t know what would have happened had the tragedy of Dallas not intervened, so in some ways Arthur and Guinevere will continue to live our memories. As Raymond so wonderfully pointed out, “don’t let it be forgot, that once there was a spot, for one brief shining moment, that was known as Camelot”.

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