Tom Robinson’s trial was probably one of the most nail biting trials ever and it all took play place in Maycomb County in southern Alabama.This trial occurred in August 26,1935 but the crime took place at the Ewells home on November 21,1934,which also means it was during The Great Depression.It all started when Mayella had accused Tom Robinson of allegedly raping and beating her,when in trial she said “-he chunked me on the floor and’ choked me and took advantage of me”(TKAM).During this trial many things occurred from the defendant’s lawyer “Atticus” kids who gaped through the whole trial to Mr.Gilmer,the accuser’s lawyer,impertinent attitude towards Tom Robinson.…
I tend to my garden as I watch several cars drive along my street back to their homes. Tom Robinson’s trial must be over. Before the trial even started, I predicted that the verdict would be guilty. When I saw Jem, Scout, and Dill arrive back at their house with long faces, my prediction was confirmed. It is still upsetting for me to hear that another innocent black man’s life was ruined because of the way white people treat them. I did not attend the trial; I do not wish to see an innocent person on trial for their life. I take off my gardening gloves and head inside. As I wash my hands, I see the children looking very upset and confused. I decide to make them chocolate cakes to help to cheer them up. They must be extremely confused and disappointed about the verdict of the trial. They are too young to completely understand our unfair society.…
In “To Kill a Mockingbird”, Atticus is a wise lawyer, who endeavours to have a fair trial for Tom Robinson. Tom is a black man accused of raping a white girl. The time is within the early 30s taken place in southern Alabama. The townspeople believed that Atticus shouldn’t present a proper defence for a Negro. However, Atticus fully intends to do so because he believes in equal rights of others. Due to this strong belief he encounters many vicious comments directed towards himself and the people supporting him. He is wise enough to know the trouble this case will bring him. “… Simply by the nature of work, every lawyer gets at least one case in his lifetime that affects him personally this one’s mine, I guess” This quote helps to emphasise that…
To Kill a Mockingbird’s themes of justice, morality, and ethics are represented through the actions and beliefs of the characters Atticus, Bob Ewell, and the town of Maycomb, represented through the Missionary Society, which is controlled by the sociable white women. Justice, as in justice by law, is inherent in the novel as is justice through karma. Morality is also central to the novel; a strong sense of morality, or rather a lack of, guides the characters as the story progresses. Ethics and unethical conduct form the basis for the plotline. Harper Lee uses characters to control the events that bring conflict in To Kill a Mockingbird.…
Why do people in the balcony stand when Atticus passes? The people in the balcony stand to show proudness and respect. As Atticus was passing Reverend Sykes told Scout “Miss Jean Louise, stand up. Your father’s passin‘.”. Everyone in the balcony knew Atticus proved Tom Robinson innocence. The white people where just thinking of themselves first before realizing that there putting an innocent man in jail for something that he did not do because of what the white’s grew up know about the black’s. The black people saw how hard Atticus fought for Tom’s innocence. Another reason the people in the balcony stood for Atticus was because they understood the passion and commitment Atticus had put into the case. The black people knew that most likely…
To Kill A Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, continues to be taught today and should continue, as the characterization of the story, although fictional, has a high resemblance to real life cases and issues of the time. It captures critical lessons and teachings that are imperative to modern-day schools and present-day society. To Kill A Mockingbird depicts the inequality between blacks and whites in the 1930s by telling a captivating story including the issues of rape and racism. Although the fictional novel To Kill A Mockingbird was set in the 1930s, it references Civil Rights cases involving discrimination, racism, and segregation that were part of the Civil Rights movement throughout the whole century.…
5. The decision to sentence all the men effected how America viewed black people. It made the ordeal of segregation a bigger situation than it already was.…
Tom Robinson was a man who received no justice because of the color of his skin. Justice in and out of the courtroom is a playing theme in To Kill a Mockingbird. We learn that justice is not given to everyone because of the majority belief of prejudice in society. People are discriminated because of the color of their skin, their age, or the things they believe in. Tom, and Scout are all prime examples of this theme.…
Many know of the Salem Witch Trials. The travesty is well known. Stores open to sell merchandise. Libraries open to the public offering tales from the time. But what do we truly know about the trials, other than what have heard from our peers, our teachers?The story of the Salem Witch Trials continues to fascinate people because it has the potential to teach us lessons about fear and prejudice.…
To Kill a Mockingbird is a book that focuses on discrimination. The County of Maycomb believes that white people are superior in everyway. Lee uses the trial to emphasize the severity of the Maycomb viewpoint. She uses it to show the readers instead of just telling them. It is also a way to discreetly show the readers how severe the Maycomb fever is without needing to have Scout, the narrator, comprehend the problem. By carefully choosing what happens and who is involved in the trial Lees proves her point explicitly.…
The only way a person is able to appropriately judge someone, is if they put themselves in their shoes first. Even in the beginning of the book, Harper Lee addresses the judgement that everyone passes to each other. When Scout attends school, she automatically dislikes her teacher when she tells Scout that Atticus can’t read to her anymore. After relaying this to Atticus, he say, “ … if you can learn a simple trick, Scout, you’ll get along a lot better with all kinds of folks. You will 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” (Lee 39). By having Atticus give this advice to Scout, Lee foreshadows coming events that Scout will need to use this information.…
Imagine how hard life was for colored people back then. How one couldn’t even receive a fair trial because of someone’s color or ethnicity. How is was virtually impossible for them to receive a fair trial without people using stereotypes to structure their judgment. To Kill a Mockingbird demonstrates many conflicts, one being the beating and rape of a white woman by a black man, which back then was punishable by death. With this case, a man by the name of Atticus accepts to defend the man who is accused : Tom Robinson. Atticus has to endure what the society throws at him, along with his two children : Jem and Scout. To Kill a Mockingbird written by Harper Lee reveals, by using characters and characters’ actions and choices, it is morally correct to stand up and do the right thing. Without someone pointing out what is wrong with the society, things will never change for the better.…
An accusation based off of circumstantial evidence, a charismatic witness, and a life-changing conviction were only a few of the elements that caused major tension in the courtroom on July 19th. If you’re one of the few that didn’t come out to hear the gossip material of the year, we have all the juicy and intriguing details.…
When Reverend Sykes, the minister at First Purchase M.E. African Church, sees them sitting in the courtroom and hoping that the judge will decide in favor of Tom, he tells them, “Now don’t you be so confident…. I ain’t ever seen any jury decide in favor of a colored man over a white man” (238). Scout and Jem, however, do not lose hope. Having learned some valuable lessons from their father, the children refuse to give up. Scout strongly believes in the co-existence of good and evil in the world and prays that good will inch over evil for Tom Robinson. "Those are twelve reasonable men in everyday life, Tom's jury, but you saw something come between them and reason… There's something in our world that makes men lose their heads - they couldn't be fair if they tried. In our courts, when it's a white man's word against a black man's, the white man always wins. They're ugly, but those are the facts of life” (220). When Atticus verbalizes this, he emphasizes the fact that all good men are reasonable men, but evil in the occurrence of convicting Tom because of the color of his…
"She was white, and she tempted a Negro. She did something that in our society is unspeakable: she kissed a black man.” In the book To Kill a Mockingbird a rape trial takes place, between Tom Robinson, a black man, and Mayella Ewell, a white women. Though most people believe Maylla because she is white, I believe Tom is not guilty because of the lack of medical evidence, lack of witnesses, and the fact that Tom Robinson was crippled in the left arm.…