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The Acceptance Of Others In To Kill A Lottery By Harper Lee

Good Essays

Anthony Vo
Mr. Martin
English 2H/Period 0
14 November 2017
The Acceptance of Others
As people view others and compare them to themselves, they see many differences, but as they gain more knowledge, they begin to realize that they are not so different from themselves. Barbara Jordan once said, “We, as human beings, must be willing to accept people who are different from ourselves.” This relates to the universal concept of ourselves and others by making us have tolerance for others and how we compare ourselves to them. This quote from Barbara Jordan is demonstrated in: To Kill A Mockingbird by a Pulitzer Prize winner Harper Lee, “Texas v. Johnson Majority Opinion” by a journalist Ronald J. Allen, and “The Lottery” by a famed author Shirley Jackson. These texts share the same idea of the concept of ourselves and others by demonstrating tolerance and presenting the ideas of tolerance through the story’s events. In order to become more conscious about oneself and others, people have to consider the feelings of tolerance, the human conscience, and the belief of an opinion is correct which causes these social issues to disappear. To begin, people’s tolerance of being around one another other is what allows people to develop bonds with others. The development of bonds is demonstrated in the fictional text “To Kill a Mockingbird” by Harper Lee, Lee introduces Atticus as a very intelligent and tolerant person who seems to get along with a multitude of the people in Maycomb,

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