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    To Kill a Mockingbird Essay – Racism and Prejudice Harper Lee uses her book To Kill a Mockingbird to explore two major issues; racism and prejudice. Racism is the belief that inherent different traits in human racial groups justify discrimination. The issue of racism is explored through Tom Robinson and his court case‚ where Tom Robinson; a black man; was accused of raping a white girl‚ he is convicted purely because he is a black man and his accuser is white. Harper Lee uses Tom’s court case and

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    The books To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee and Mississippi Trial‚ 1955 by Chris Crowe are about two African American boys who are treated unfairly in the deep South. The cases of these two boys‚ Tom Robinson and Emmett Till‚ help to emphasize the idea of racial prejudice. The books teach many lessons throughout‚ and draw attention to how things have changed since then. Both authors use the similarities and differences of Tom Robinson and Emmett Till to symbolize prejudice. Tom and Emmett’s similarities

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    for civil rights 45 years after the civil rights movement.” -Ruben Santiago-Hudson‚ actor. This quote explains what is happening today even after the Civil Rights Movement‚ and explains why I believe To Kill A Mockingbird would still be influential today.I believe the novel To Kill A Mockingbird would be influential to our society if published today for the first time‚ because the overall theme of the book applies to many of the problems we as a people face today. The overall theme of the book was

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    The book To Kill a Mockingbird is set in the town of Maycomb‚ Alabama during the Great Depression. Scout‚ Jem and Atticus are the main characters and Atticus is their father. Atticus who is a lawyer had to defend a black man for a crime that he did not commit. The white people in town believed that a black man‚ Tom Robinson‚ raped a white girl. At the trial‚ Scout and Jem are exposed to racism and stereotypes and in the end Tom Robinson is found guilty. In the book‚ Atticus says to Scout “You never

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    In the To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee there are many characters who exhibit characteristics of a ¨mockingbird¨. The characteristics of a mockingbird can be viewed from various points of view of the reader. The traits I saw for a character to be a mockingbird are that they must show signs of responsibility and will take action against the beliefs of the other citizens of Maycomb‚ Alabama. The characters that most show the characteristics of a mockingbird are Atticus Finch‚ Tom Robinson‚ and Jem

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    Innocence‚ or the loss of innocence‚ is a theme that permeates many great works of literature. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is no exception. The novel compares many of its characters to mockingbirds‚ a symbol of pure innocence. Two of the most prominent of the novel’s mockingbirds are Tom Robinson‚ a black man wrongly accused and convicted of rape‚ and Boo Radley‚ an outcast from society who spends his days like a hermit locked up in his house. Tom provides something beneficial to society

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    Symbolic Roles The characters in To Kill a Mockingbird portray stereotypes and classic roles. Scout is the epitome of an innocent child‚ and through her eyes we see events unfold that change her status and broaden her awareness of the world around her. Due to her innocence in the beginning of the novel‚ we have to view her as an unreliable narrator because her views on the situations in the novel are somewhat skewed by her inexperience with the evils in the world. Bob Ewell symbolizes the evils

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    Sin to Kill a Mockingbird It is a sin to hurt the ones that only help the helpless and only do good things for the world. In To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee‚ a young girl named Scout Finch goes on many adventures with her older brother‚ Jem. They lived in Maycomb County in the mid 1930s. They deal with visits from their best friend‚ Dill‚ trouble with the town’s biggest trial and missions to get their neighbor‚ Boo Radley‚ out of his house for the first time in years. At the time‚ Atticus‚ their

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    prejudicial are often biased and act unfavourably to other groups‚ particularly those of differing race and socio-economic status. Ideas and themes about prejudice are strongly evoked through Harper Lee’s 1960 novel “To Kill a Mocking-bird” and the poem “The Child” by Valerie Church. “To Kill a Mocking-bird” explores the prejudices associated with the coloured and underprivileged community group in a small town of the central Alabama which contrasts to the simplistic nature of a mentally-disabled boy in

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    flawless citizen with good values‚ morals and principles. Atticus Finch was a firm believer in equilibrium. During the novel‚ he was faced with the toughest challenge; defending Tom Robinson‚ who was an innocent Negro‚ charged with the raping of a white girl. "Every lawyer gets one case in his lifetime that affects him personally. This is mine." Atticus put his heart and soul into this case‚ desperately trying to make people give him a fair trial‚ "in our courts all men are created equal." Even

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