In “To Kill a Mockingbird”, by Harper Lee, there are many symbols. Lee puts many examples in her story that alludes to a major theme about political and social injustice. She attacks the 20th century issues and attempts shine a brighter light on it. There are plenty of quotes in the novel that have a symbolic meaning. The symbols in this book has a greater meaning behind it than ever before.…
The setting in this story is significant because, the whole story is about how a young black boy is treated unfairly and sentenced to death because of something he did not do. It also deals with the emotions that this black boy faces because he has been treated unfairly by the white people.…
He tells the story of a young girl and boy in trying situations and persuades his audience to feel sorry for them. The boy lives in a bad area. His father is “jobless” and his mother is a “sleep-in domestic.” The girl must take on the “role of [a] mother” because her “mother died.” What reader can help but feeling sorry for a young child who has no hope? They still live in fear and desolation and have no hope, for their race is sinking. Once, their people worked with “George Washington” and “shed blood in the revolution.” But, they fell from higher hopes and were put on “slave ships... in chains.” The reader can’t help but feel sorry for a race that has been so abused and taken advantage of.…
Symbolism is something that is plentiful in To Kill A Mockingbird. There are at least five mockingbirds throughout the book, even though I didn't list all of them in my essay. There is a clear theme throughout the story. It is Man vs Society. That is symbolized by the Tom Robinson trial…
Imagine sitting in a court room as a black man. You are put on trial for something you never would have even though about doing. You look around at an all-white jury. You have little hope of getting out of this situation being ruled innocent, but you don’t give up. This is exactly what happens with the Scottsboro Boys. The Scottsboro Boys trial of the 1930’s parallels many of the events in Harper Lee’s Novel To Kill a Mockingbird.…
Acceptance is a vital part of human interaction throughout history. This concept of acceptance is interpreted in a quote from Barbara Jordan, was a politician, lawyer, educator, and a leader of the Civil Rights Movement. She believed that “We, as human beings, must be willing to accept people who are different from ourselves.” This belief is one that she lived by in all the aspects of her daily life. In analysis, it can be found that there are several similar themes present in the Collection One texts “Texas v. Johnson Majority Opinion”, “The Wife’s Story”, and “The Lottery”, all of which go hand- and- hand with Jordan’s quote about acceptance.…
The audience is abolitionists and the author presents them with an opportunity to take action by using pathos. He knows his audience wants to do something to stop slavery, but has no power to (being from Massachusetts), so he gives them the opportunity to “protect [Douglass] as a brother-man.” He also uses an impassioned tone to effectively arouse the reader.…
The repetition is shown with the swastika flags going down the walkway on both sides. Flag showing Nazi party is taking over and if the people have a problem they are going to have to deal with the men holding them. The Nazium party which was really evil when it came down to what Hitler really wanted. Swastika were on the soldiers left arm also on the flag and symbols on top of the flags. Soldiers having the swastika on their arm shows they are for the Nazium. Flag to them is like the American flag to The United States. They have respect for their flag and their country. The swastika used to mean something good like good fortune. Hitler made the symbol look evil and people are scared to see it.…
Unfortunately, this answer raises serious questions concerning legality issues, as government intervention appears the only option. Under the editorial’s reasonings, both private and public Confederate symbols would be removed from the public. Plus, it is unfair to those suffering from the racist behaviors of Confederate flag supporters to only remove the artifacts from the public, but allow those same artifacts to be owned by the very people who discriminate them. Indisputably, however, human beings are both prideful and stubborn, and the entire population of America will not allow symbols of the Confederacy to be simply removed from their own private property. Government action –laws announcing that it is prohibited to own or display these…
Symbolism was found many times throughout the story. The first time I came around symbolism was when the family was talking about Toomsboro. Toomsboro sounds a lot like tomb so that symbolizes the eventual fate the family will soon meet. The next symbolism I found was when The Misfit’s car was going down the road towards the disoriented family. The car was described as “big black battered hearse-like automobile (145).” The reason that this is symbolism is because a hearse is what carries coffins to funerals. The Misfit’s car represents the intimate death that the family will soon meet. Lastly, the final symbolism is the cloudless, sunless sky. Most people would think that a day with no clouds would be a beautiful, happy day filled with fun; however, this family in the story thought that but it turned out to be their worst day. Usually when a murder takes place it happens at night when it is dark and no one is around. This murder happened on a beautiful day, but the main reason I brought up this is because when The Misfit shot the Grandmother, she feel back looking up towards the beautiful sky with a smile on her face. This symbol represents that the Grandmother found inner peace with herself.…
In the short story, “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut the literary device, symbolism, develops the central idea. The central idea being, the government’s oppression and how it affects people. It is easy to rise from oppression, but people are too afraid to stand up. Harrison’s hindrance is that the government does not allow anyone to take off the handicaps. Harrison overcomes the obstacle by proving the government wrong, and doing the contrary. Symbolism is represented in the scene where Harrison declares he is emperor and when he rises to the ceiling with the ballerina, “And then in an explosion of joy and grace, into the air they sprang!” This act is symbolic because it shows that even if the government has control, there are people brave enough to outcome the consequences. Symbolism is developed throughout the story because it starts out with everyone being the same, having the same handicap problems. The symbol used in the scene is freedom because Harrison and the ballerina are freed from the handicaps; “Harrison plucked the mental handicap from her ear, snapped off her physical handicaps with marvelous delicacy. Last of all, he removed her mask.” This quote shows Harrison standing up to the government. It supports the central idea, because it shows the complete opposite of the government oppressing people. For Harrison the government may have caused oppression, and affected him but he stood up to show that the government might be wrong in some actions. The fact that Harrison stood up shows how they have different thinking, even if they have the same handicaps. Even if Harrison was 14 years old he proved the society that the government can’t take advantage of their…
Throughout the movie, Rob Reiner uses symbolism to help the audience understand the story. Four boys’ that embark on a journey to find the missing body of a young boy. Symbolism represents an object or person which holds a significant meaning or character. Throughout the boys’ journey they pass by certain symbolic events which hold a special significance.…
It starts off with the rape of a young black girl, the daughter of Carl Lee Hailey, who “loses her innocence” to two white men in the South. This epitomizes the hatred of blacks by the whites in the South,…
“It is marked on the face, stamped on the skin, and shown by the inferiority of this race”. The slaves had got beaten so bad, close to death that it left marks on them from being whipped. Just from being “African American”, the “whites” think they were considered slaves. Sometimes, the slaves were given new names every time they were sold, whether they agreed to it or not. And, if they made too much noise or made conversation, they could end up losing their life.…
The scene with the street riots in Virginia establishes the conflict between the two races in this environment and many other places similar to it, like that of Maycomb County (the setting of To Kill A Mockingbird). The way the two races are separated on opposites sides in the scene symbolises what the way of life is for each both the white and black people.…