According to Galatians 3:28, “There is no longer Jew or Gentile, slave or free, male and female. For you are all one in Jesus Christ.” Even God says it, people are to treat others equally with no higher expectations for any race, gender, religion, etc. Discrimination is defined as “the practice of unfairly treating a person or group of people differently from other people or groups of people.” This topic can be formidable for some people to talk about, for they may have personal experience with it. Discrimination has definitely been a problem in the world, and sadly, is still lingering in some people today. This is something clearly shown throughout the novel To Kill A Mockingbird. Three characters who are victims of discrimination is Dolphus Raymond, Tom …show more content…
Arthur Radley (Boo). Boo is a mysterious man, and a common villain of Maycomb’s stories. Throughout the novel To Kill A Mockingbird Boo is told to be a dangerous, evil, and mischievous man. Many citizens of the town have discriminated against him with these rumors even though they don’t know a lot about him. These people have no right to be saying what they are. Little do they know that Boo has comforted and saved Jem and Scout, two young children. He is protective and unfortunately lonely. Mr. Radley becomes known to Scout later in the novel. She is beginning to see the real side of him and realizing people’s thoughts about him are untruthful and unfair. Arthur’s discrimination has caused him to not want to come out of his house, he doesn’t feel the need to interact with others who he doesn’t feel loved by. Many people need to realize that his past and his family isn’t his doing, and all he wants is to be accepted by the people of the town. Only Scout eventually grew emotions for him, which is something everyone needed to do. Mr. Arthur Radley is the victim of discrimination and only needed love from those around him all
Boo Radley is a mysterious and suspicious character, where throughout the beginning and middle of the book, Scout, Jem, and Dill have a preconception of him being a mean, old man. At the ending of the book, when Boo saves the children from Mr. Ewell, Scout sees how she prejudiced him based on other people’s beliefs. Boo is one of the most misunderstood characters of the book, starting out as a fantasy and a monster, but then he turns out to be very thoughtful, brave, and kind.
The whole time, Arthur was there, helping her and Jem. Through empathy Scout realizes although they might have never seen Boo Radley, Boo was there for them. Standing on the Radley porch, Scout sees the neighborhood in a new light and her empathy is further developed. She says, “Atticus was right. One time he said you never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them.
Prejudice should not exist in this world. But unfortunately, it does and it always will somehow. The book, To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, is an inspiring book and brings out hard truths about how the world used to be, about the great depression, and in some aspects how it still is today. It follows a girl named Scout and her family through three years of her childhood. Her father, Atticus Finch, took on a very big challenge to defend a negro for raping a girl. The book sort of revolves around this event. Prejudice is in many different forms of discrimination. Throughout the book it is demonstrated by race, class, and gender.
Mr Radley was ashamed of his son’s behaviour when he got into the wrong crowd as a youngster and punished him by locking him up. There is a lot of gossip around Maycomb about Boo and people blame him for any bad things that happen in the neighbourhood, ‘Any stealthy crimes committed in Maycomb were his work.’ Jem turns him into a monster, ‘his hands were blood-stained’, and ‘his eyes popped’. At the end of the novel however, we find that Boo is misunderstood, and gossip of the town’s folk has made him up to be a ‘malevolent phantom’. Scout tells us he is timid, he had, ‘the voice of a child afraid of the dark’.
Boo Radley was the reclusive man who never setted foot outside his house. He is a powerful symbol of goodness. In the Halloween night when Jem and Scout returned from school, Boo Radley saved them from Bob Ewell who tried to kill them by the knife because of the hatred with Atticus Finch. Then he carried unconscious Jem home to the safety of the Finch house. Boo watched Jem and Scout day by day and gave them soft of gifts in a tree outside the Radley place. There was a lot of imagination with rumors about his appearance but he was scare to appear to save Jem and Scout. "First of all," Atticus said, "if you can learn a simple trick, Scout, you'll get along a lot better with all kinds of folks. You never really understand a person until you consider things form his point of view until you climb into his skin and walk around in it." Jem and Scout learned some of things from Boo that they could not judge people without knowing them. Boo Radley was one of the novel’s “mockingbirds,” a good person injured by the evil of
As Scout and Jem walk home from the pageant they got attacked by Mr. Ewell. They screamed for help and the only person that heard them was Arthur (Boo) Radley. So he ran out to rescue their lives. This is the first time Mr.Radley left his house and the first time Scout saw him. To most people it was a mystery how Mr. Radley looked. When he was at Scout’s house he went to the farthest corner and the people there acted as if Mr. Radley was invisible.
In Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird, an unknown killer lies within the citizens of Maycomb. Many people would claim that the prison guards with the guns killed Tom Robinson, while the true killer manifests in the form of prejudice. Though the discrimination seems visible, many people still choose to overlook it. Prejudice did not only killed Tom, but contributes to a larger problem in their society. Tom Robinson is an African American man from Maycomb, Alabama, wrongfully accused of sexual assaulting a white women named by the name of Mayella.
Defeating racism, tribalism, intolerance, and all forms of discrimination will liberate us all- victim and perpetrator alike." -Ban Ki-moon. In To Kill a Mockingbird, there are many characters who are victims of all kinds of discrimination. The novel took place in the 1930's where this was a major part of towns across the country.
In Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird prejudice is interwoven throughout the entire novel. There is black/white prejudice, prejudice against individuals in the town and even inside the Finch family. To Kill a Mockingbird was set in the 1930’s in a small town in Alabama called Maycomb County. The community as a whole is very racist. The novel is seen through the eyes of a young girl, which enhances the themes of developing prejudice.
Discrimination can be exhibited in many forms. In Harper Lee’s novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, we see numerous examples of prejudice that have a large impact on society. We come to realize that no form stands alone. In the novel, there are three main forms of discrimination, racism, sexism, and classism.
During the 1930’s and the 1960’s discrimination against blacks was popular. There is discrimination everywhere for almost everything, even today, but not as much as there used to be. In To Kill A Mockingbird and The Help both Scout and Skeeter see and experience discrimination. Scout sees discrimination during the Tom Robinson case, and she experiences it when she is told to act like a girl. Skeeter experiences discrimination when people are shocked she finished college and got a job, instead of getting married.
Discrimination is a very mean and hurtful type of bullying that is usually strongly associated with race or sex. It is one of the most hateful and offensive types of bullying that can one day hopefully be eliminated for good. In both To Kill a Mockingbird and The Help, discrimination is a very strong issue that both of the main characters react to differently. To Kill a Mockingbird is about the Finch family and their affairs in the small town of Maycomb, Alabama in the 1930’s. The Help is set in Jackson, Mississippi in the early 1960’s.
In Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird racism affects the events in the novel by producing unfair prejudice between the white and black populations. Jem and Scout Finch are the son and daughter of Atticus Finch, a defense attorney. After their father starts defending a black man, Tom Robinson who is accused of rape, they experience alienation and racism. Throughout the novel, the reader comes to realize that Robinson is an innocent man, charged guilty because of his skin color and the racist jury.
Discrimination: a noun that is defined as, “the unjust or prejudicial treatment of different categories of people or things, especially on the grounds of race, age, or sex”. There are many types of discrimination in To Kill a Mockingbird. To Kill a Mockingbird is a story that is taken place during the Great Depression . Scout is the main character and her father Atticus is defending a man named Tom Robinson, who is a Negro. There are three main topics that are discriminated in To Kill a Mockingbird. The three main topics that are discriminated are socioeconomics, gender, and most importantly, racism.
Racism, as in a belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial difference produce an inherent superiority of a particular race as well as racial prejudice or discrimination is prevalent in our country . Racism in America is a societal monster of our past that is still haunting us in our modern society as revealed in media, societal stereotypes, societal misconceptions, and the legal system. “With the election of Barack Obama as President many believed we were entering into a post-racial America, a color-blind society where racism could begin to be healed if not totally dismissed. However, a recent Associated Press poll has shown that this is not the case (AP, 2012). In fact, racial prejudice has increased slightly since 2008”, (Ponds 3), Many Americans think that we as a whole are past racial prejudice however it is not the truth.