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To Kill A Mockingbird Analysis

Decent Essays

Charles Lamb once said, “Lawyers, I suppose, were children once.” The author of To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee, studied law just as her father had done. Her award winning novel is narrated by a character that is based upon Lee’s childhood, in a more or less autobiographical sense. To Kill a Mockingbird takes place in an Alabama town during The Great Depression. Jean Louise Finch, better known as Scout, learns the difficulties of understanding the difference in others, with the help of her family, friends, and fellow citizens of Maycomb. Scout and her brother share a father named Atticus, who practices law as an attorney for Maycomb. When Atticus receives a racially charged black versus white case, the novel takes off into a fictional story that teaches the protagonists valuable lessons that they would never forget.The author proves that injustice does not always dwindle with age. The theme of injustice is portrayed influentially, socially, and racially. Characters in the novel are influenced by both others and the past into discrimination. Influential injustice helps Scout and her brother Jeremy (Jem Finch) come to the realization of just how badly certain groups or individuals are treated. Scout claims, “He announced in the schoolyard the day before that Scout Finch’s Daddy defended niggers” (Lee 99; ch. 9). The parents of the students in Scout's class sway the opinions of those kids into teasing her for the actions of her father. Most citizens of Maycomb, Alabama

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