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'To Kill a Mockingbird' Author Harper Lee Dies



American novelist Harper Lee, famous for her masterpiece “To Kill a Mockingbird” and for shunning the fame it brought her, has died aged 89, officials in her hometown said Friday (Feb.19). A spokeswoman for Monroeville, Ala., where Lee was born and spent her final years living in seclusion, confirmed local media reports of her death, saying: “She did pass away.” Lee’s 1960 novel, which earned her a Pulitzer Prize, came to define racial injustice in the Depression-era South and became standard reading in classrooms across the world.
As a Southern Gothic novel and a Bildungsroman, the primary themes of To Kill a Mockingbird involve racial injustice and the destruction of innocence. Scholars have noted that Lee also addresses issues of class, courage, compassion, and gender roles in the American Deep South. The book is widely taught in schools in the United States with lessons that emphasize tolerance and decry prejudice.






Harper Lee’s chart is available from Astro-Databank [1] and is reproduced here.  The table below gives the solar progressions for the period  around 1960 when the book was published and received the Pulitzer prize.

Dynamic Chart:
 Harper Lee - Natal Chart
 28 Apr 1926, 5:25 pm, CST +6:00
 Monroeville Alabama, 31°N31'40'', 087°W19'29''
 Geocentric Tropical Zodiac
 Placidus Houses,  True Node

Selection: Solar Arc Dirns planets

Asc (2)     Sqq          Plu (9)     (X)           Sa-Na      7 Jul 1959                27°Sc47' D               12°Cn47' D
Vus (9)    Cnj           Plu (9)     (X)           Sa-Na      12 Jul 1960              12°Cn47' D              12°Cn47' D

*** END REPORT ***

Notice that natal Pluto in the 9th (in Cancer) is the focus of the progressions. The following  edited extract from Steven Forrest [2]explains the meaning of this position.

The ninth house is often referred to the as the “House of Long Journeys”.  Nothing will so challenge our beliefs as an encounter with their alternatives. Generally throughout history such encounters have been hard to come by. Multiculturalism has been a rare phenomenon: cultures have tended to be monolithic  with a particular set of commonly held values binding them into unity. To experience the reality of alternative perspectives travelling and living among foreigners provided an “ education” that was unavailable elsewhere….at least until “education” became widely available and that is another meaning of the traditional ninth house: universities, learning, scholarship. Closely linked to those notions was the idea of the dissemination of knowledge. Hence, the association of the ninth house with the publishing industry…and who hasn’t  ever been taken on a “Long Journey” by a book?  So what does it mean when Pluto lies here? The dissemination of knowledge requires spokespeople. Call them Teachers, Writers, Preachers…whatever. They speak to us about the moral or metaphysical framework of life.   The best of them recognize the limitations of the wounds tied to the “religion of their people” or the collective attitude of their ethnic group (Pluto in Cancer) and commit themselves zealously to the formidable task  of stretching the boundaries of consciousness beyond the narrow framework of their culture.

In addition Pluto is conjunct the asteroid Hopi. Martha Wescott’s delineations below deepen our understanding of Lee’s radix Pluto and explain why she wrote To Kill a Mocking Bird.

HOPI shows up as incidents with minorities (including Afro-Americans) and reactions to what is perceived as discrimination or prejudice.
 HOPI/PLUTO: to see power struggles, fears of domination or concerns about inhibitions and ruthlessness in dealing with prejudice and/or minority individuals; to understand the impact of generational poverty and powerlessness in minority cultures.

Currently her progressed Sun [4le] opposite the asteroid Orpheus [3aq]  has become the reason for her death. The immediate cause was transit Mars [23sc] conjunct natal Saturn [23sc] (natal square).

ORPHEUS: sense of mourning and loss; grief (for what you don't have—what has gone out of your life--  “might have been” or what was); contact with death. 

[2] The Book of Pluto; Steven Forrest

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