To Kill A Mockingbird Ignorance

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You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view,” said Atticus Finch in Harper Lee's novel, To Kill a Mockingbird (33). A brilliant woman who thought way ahead of her time, the author, Ms. Lee, wrote To Kill a Mockingbird during the times of segregation and harsh racial prejudice. Written about a young girl and her family living through a tough economic depression and racial injustice, To Kill a Mockingbird is a detailed novel. This narrative takes place in the 1930’s, in a fictional Alabama town, Maycomb. Lee’s story goes through the narrator, Scout Finch’s, adolescence and her growing up in the 1930s with her family whilst experiencing the happy, sad, humiliating, and scary parts of her childhood (Lee …show more content…

To Kill a Mockingbird shows themes that describe how members of society should and should not think such as, Racial prejudice causing ignorance, not judging on someones’ social status, and disrespecting others' differences is wrong. Racial prejudice causes ignorance. A person can not be a well-functioning member of society if they have a lack of knowledge, but they can learn that everyone is created equal no matter the color of their skin or any other differences they may have. Wrongfully, Tom was convicted of rape due to the color of his skin (Lee 232-234). Tom Robinson did have to go to jail because the jury, which was all men and all white, deemed him guilty even though there was evidence that he did not commit the crime. He did eventually die in jail in an attempt to escape his sentence. The jury convicted him simply because he, a black male, was accused by a white female. Due to the fact that she was a black woman, Helen Robinson was constantly harassed by Bob Ewell when she walked past their home (Lee 276). Helen Robinson, a black woman, was repeatedly harassed by Bob Ewell, the man who accused her husband of raping his

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