To Kill A Mockingbird Movie Vs Text Analysis

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Inquiry question: Compare and contrast between the visual and text form of ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’, in terms of depicting and discarding themes of gender, social class and discrimination of Maycomb towards Tom and Atticus.


In 1962, Robert Mulligan directed a movie based on Harper Lee’s best-selling novel, To Kill a Mockingbird. The film served the audience productively with an outstanding storyline. The movie faced a certain limitation, for of depicting themes from the text. Meanwhile, the novel is more expanded with no sense of limitation. The Ewell’s position hierarchy was not portrayed in the film. Instead, it was heavily implied in the text. Both film and the novel had portrayed Maycomb’s discrimination towards Atticus and his children. Regardless of these adjustments, the film effectively portrayed the main plot of ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’.


Gender was a predominant theme in the text. Film’s limitation resulted in the theme’s …show more content…

Correspondingly, both of the sources were commonly adapting the discrimination towards Atticus Finch. For instance, Atticus was appointed by the judge Taylor to become Tom Robinson’s attorney. As he was Spuriously accused of raping Mayella Ewell. However, People of Maycomb allied against Tom, nor they rallied behind Bob Ewell. As well as for Atticus, defending Tom formed a colossal tension between him and the common people of Maycomb. His children were tremendously bullied and intimidated for their father’s actions. The surrounding atmosphere was atrocious for the Finch’s. While the society continuously discriminated Atticus and his children, they addressed him as a “Nigger lover” (chapter…., page…) considering his decision of defending Tom was scandalous and brought stigma to the Finch’s. Thus, both film and the text similarly adapted and portrayed Maycomb’s abhorrence and discrimination towards Atticus’s position for defending Tom

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