Essay On Folks In To Kill A Mockingbird

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In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, the citizens of Maycomb County are treated in a specific way because of who they are. In the novel Jean Louise Finch, or Scout, could not see the differences between “folks”. Scout makes the statement “I think there is just one kind of folks, folks.” (Pg. 304). By saying this, she is stating that it doesn’t matter who you are, in the end everyone is just human beings and can not be anything more. Discrimination in the novel is addressed when Aunt Alexandra would not let Scout be friends with Walter Cunningham, how Bob Ewell hates black people, and when the jury made Tom Robinson guilty even though they know he is innocent. Aunt Alexandra is a woman of the early 1900s, she believes that girls should be prim and proper and Scout can not talk to the lower class. For example, when she tells Scout,” You can …show more content…

In one case he stated,’’ I seen that black nigger yonder ruttin’ on my Mayella!”(Pg.231). At the time it was understandable for Bob Ewell to be angry, but it is written many times in the novel of him calling colored folks unpleasant names. In other cases after the Tom Robinson case Bob followed Tom’s wife, Helen Robinson, to her job,”Mr. Ewell kept the same distance behind her until she reached Mr. Link Deas's house. ”(Pg. ). He thinks he is more powerful than Helen that he intrudes in her personal life just to bother her. The jury is another precedent of discrimination, and it is also related to Tom Robinson. They had wrongly convicted Tom guilty of raping Mayella Ewell. It was so obvious that the whole town knew that he was innocent, when Atticus told the court,”In the name of god do your job”(Pg.275). Atticus knew that the jury would most likely not let Tom go. The jury would never let a black man win against a white man, even if it is painfully obvious the other is

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