Harper Lee's novel To Kill a Mockingbird is set in the 1930s, a period marked by racial segregation and discrimination. Lee's novel follows six-year-old Scout Finch, the daughter of a white lawyer who decides to risk everything to defend a black man. Through her skillful use of foreshadowing, Lee sets the tone and prepares the reader for the events that are yet to come in the novel. Foreshadowing is a literary device used by authors to hint at what will happen later in the story. In her novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee masterfully uses the symbolic significance of the snow, snowman, and mockingbird to foreshadow later events. In Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, a change of weather occurs. In Maycomb, it started to snow. The use of snow serves as a symbol for …show more content…
.‘No, it’s not, he said. ‘It's snowing’" (Lee 86). This quote highlights the gravity of the situation and how the snow symbolizes the presence of the all-white jury. The snow indicates a sense of purity and innocence. However, the snow also has a negative connotation, as it is associated with whiteness, which represents power and privilege in the novel. This is significant because the all-white jury is biased against Tom Robinson, a black man, due to their prejudices during the trial. The snow, therefore, serves as a metaphor for the all-white jury and the injustice in the trial. As the story progresses, the snow becomes more prominent, indicating the increasing power and influence of the all-white jury. This is evident when Atticus, the defense lawyer, explains to Jem, Scout's brother, that "In our courts, when it's a white man's word against a black man's, the white man always wins" (Lee 295). This quote directly connects the snow symbol to the all-white jury and the systemic racism present in the justice system. Overall, the use of snow as a symbol in To Kill a Mockingbird highlights the impact of racism and its influence on the legal system in the South during the
Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird is based during the era of racism and prejudice. This era is commonly referred to as The Great Depression and is during the mid-late 30’s. The novel is set in a small town and county called Maycomb, Alabama. The novel follows the story of the Finch’s and their struggle before, during, and after a rape trial that is set against an African American by a white woman and her father. To Kill A Mockingbird has many symbols that have a thematic significance. Flowers and “Mockingbird” type characters are the main types of symbols.
'To Kill a Mockingbird' is a novel that was written in the 1960s, but Harper Lee decided to set the novel in the Depression era of the 1930s in a small town in Alabama. Lee provided her readers with a historical background for the affairs of that time and in doing so she exposed the deeply entrenched history of the civil rights in South America. Like the main characters in this novel, Lee grew up in Alabama; this made it easier for her to relate to the characters in the novel as she would have understood what they would have experienced during the period when racism, discrimination and inequality was on the increase within the American society.
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, takes place in a small town called Maycomb, during the 1930's. A friendly town with children as well as old people. The kids found it boring, there was nothing intresting, no money, and nothing to buy. There lives Scout Finch, her older brother Jem, and their father Atticus, who is a lawyer. They are living better then most families in the area because Atticus gets a lot of work. During one summer, one of the neighbor's nephew visits, Dill, and Scout and Jem become friends with him. Dill developes an obsession with Arthur Radley, also known as Boo, who, along with his brother Nathan, lives next door to the Finches but is never seen outside the home. Soon after summer ends, Scout has to start school, and her teacher finds out she has been reading on her own and ironically tells her to stop, she soon begins to hate school. One day on their way home Scout and Jem find gifts in a tree in front of the Radley home. As Dill returns the next summer they start attempting to get Boo out, Atticus finds out and makes them stop, but they continue to scheme for the last day of summer. They sneak on to the property where Jems pants get stuck and he has to take them off, the next they he finds them sewn nicely and hung on the Radley fence. They find more presents in the tree, but the hole soon gets plugged up by Nathan.
In To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee shows the reality of the world in the 1930s through the point of view of a little girl named Scout. She starts as a carefree tomboy, but learns to be more ladylike as the story continues. Her life really starts to change during a trial where her father is defending a black man. Also, she learns that killing a mockingbird is a sin.Overall, she grows up throughout the book, and starts to realize all the issues of Maycomb.
Although Tom Robinson is innocent, the Judge finds him guilty because Tom Robinson told the jury that “I felt sorry for her”(Lee 197). This symbolizes the judgement in social class because Tom knew he made a great mistake saying, to the town of Maycomb, that he felt sorry for a white female. This was a turning point during the trial because in Maycomb, people in a higher class viewed other lower classes as not important and no respect to them. Their judgment towards the lower classes based on their skin color or what they are wearing is how people in Maycomb divide themselves from one another. In addition, another judgmental aspect in To Kill a Mockingbird is racism. Someone who shows racism is called a racist, which is a major factor in the novel. On Jem’s birthday, Scout and Jem are
Harper Lee’s only book, To Kill a Mockingbird, is the stereotypical tale of childhood and innocence, yet it successfully incorporates mature themes, like the racism in the South at the time, to create a masterpiece of a work that has enraptured people’s minds and hearts for generations. According to esteemed novelist Wally Lamb, “It was the first time in my life that a book had sort of captured me. That was exciting; I didn’t realize that literature could do that” (111). Scout’s witty narration and brash actions make her the kind of heroine you can’t help but root for, and the events that take place in Maycomb County are small-scale versions of the dilemmas that face our world today. Mockingbird is a fantastically written novel that belongs on the shelves of classic literature that everyone should take the time to read and appreciate for its execution of style and the importance of its content.
To Kill a Mockingbird, many of the characters and objects portray deeper meanings than what meets the eye. Atticus Finch represents upstanding morals and rational philosophy, the Mockingbird represents innocence, and the snowman represents that white and black people are the same. Although the majority of the townspeople intimidate, criticize, and verbally abuse Atticus, he does not sway away from his righteous morals. Judge Taylor appoints Atticus to take the Tom Robinson case because he knows Atticus is the only one who will defend Tom. Along with the townspeople, Atticus’ family criticizes and insults him.
“You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view… until you climb into his skin and walk around in it.” Walking around in a person’s skin is essential to learning how to understand others and the world around you. In Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird”, she uses voice, symbol, and foreshadowing to contribute to the theme that Good and Evil always coexist, and people often have both.
The novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee is a simplistic view of life in the Deep South of America in the 1930s. An innocent but humorous stance in the story is through the eyes of Scout and Jem Finch. Scout is a young adolescent who is growing up with the controversy that surrounds her fathers lawsuit. Her father, Atticus Finch is a lawyer who is defending a black man, Tom Robinson, with the charge of raping a white girl. The lives of the characters are changed by racism and this is the force that develops during the course of the narrative.
To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee is a novel about the act of growing up. The main character is a girl named Scout Finch who is the narrator as well as the protagonist of the story. She is a very curious person for someone of her age. The book discusses what she learns about people and about life. In the primitive stages of the novel Scout’s narrating is very childish, humorous, and innocent, although as the novel progresses it becomes increasingly dark. It takes place between 1933 and 1935 in a small quiet town called Maycomb located in southern Alabama. Scout’s father, Atticus, is a lawyer. Their family struggle’s with money because his clients are poor. Scout lives with her father, her brother Jem, and their cook Calpurnia. Her mother passed when her and Jem were young, for they continuously morn in her absence. However, they look forward to the summers due to the fact that their friend Dill comes and stays next door. They go on many adventures together.
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee doubtlessly contains many elements of suspense. In this book, suspense is produced through literary devices and is intricately woven in to keep the reader hooked on the story’s outcome. Employing uncertainty and cliffhangers, Harper Lee creates suspenseful situations in her novel.
In the novel "To Kill a Mockingbird", Harper Lee, wrote the words that Atticus said to his children, Jem and Scout Finch. Atticus said "...it is a sin to kill a mockingbird," mockingbirds are known as gentle creatures who do no wrong and makes music for everyone's delight. To kill a mockingbird would be similar to killing an individual who does not wrong anyone and tries to be as helpful as they can. Mockingbirds have the characteristics of nobility, innocence, and valor that are mirror the characters Atticus Finch, Tom Robinson, and Arthur “Boo” Radley. Atticus Finch, Tom Robinson, and Boo Radley are portrayed as mockingbirds for their actions, and for the good they did for the individuals surrounding them and the negative treatment they endured for their actions.
The book To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is a Pulitzer Prize winning novel. It is set in the 1930s, a time when racism was very prominent. Harper Lee emphasizes the themes of prejudice and tolerance in her novel through the use of her characters and their interactions within the Maycomb community. The narrator of the story, Scout, comes across many people and situations with prejudice and tolerance, as her father defends a black man.
To Kill a Mockingbird is a novel about the coming of age by Harper Lee, in which she narrates the story through Scout Finch who describes her childhood. The novel begins with Scout living with her brother, Jem, and their widowed father, Atticus, in Alabama’s town of Maycomb during the time of the Great Depression, Atticus is a lawyer and the Finch family are rich in comparison to others. Jem and Scout befriend Dill, who came to Maycomb for multiple summers. They become fascinated with a house on their street called the Radley Place and the mysterious and spooky character of Boo Radley. Scout goes to school for the first time and hates it. Scout
It is widely known that fewer people today are getting married and many couples without kids. With population growth, many young adult Americans will reach the age of marriage as it used to be. Many elderly parents are looking forward to the day when their kids have children, so that they can hug their grandchildren. However, marriage in America is not as popular as the past. The marriage rate has continued to decline, and many showing less interest in marriage.