An Analysis Of Tom Robinson's Trial In To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee

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Jem becomes very interested in Tom Robinson’s trial, presumably because he looks up to Atticus and wants to be like him, so he takes an interest in something that looms large on Atticus’ horizon. After Mayella Ewell, the white woman who accuses Tom Robinson of raping her, convicts in court, Jem wisely informs Scout and Reverend Skyes that “[they’ve won it. [He does not] see how any jury could convict on what [they] heard ”. Jem clearly does not understand the unfairness of Maycomb’s judicial system and the racism behind it. Evidently, Atticus and Tom Robinson do not win the case, and Jem seems to lose his faith in humanity afterwards. Shocked, he says, “How could they do it, how could they?” (243), and truly does not understand how. Jem takes

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