preview

To Kill A Mockingbird Persuasive Essay

Decent Essays

Jean Louise Finch takes the train from New York to visit her family and hometown of Maycomb, Alabama. She heads home and begins to catch up with family, and a conversation come up and her father, Atticus asks Jean if she had heard about what was going on in the South. Jean Louise and Hank, her guy friend goes out on a date and as they are leaving they drive pass a car full of black people speeding. Later that afternoon Hank and her father leaves for a meeting, Jean walks in the living room and finds a pamphlet called “The Black Plague”. At the meeting her father introduced a speaker, his speech was full of racist slurs against blacks, warnings of “mongrelizing” the white race through interracial marriage, praise for the “Southern Way of Life,” …show more content…

Hank says he told the sheriff Atticus wouldn’t take the case, but Atticus says he will take it. Atticus goes on and says that they should take the case to avoid it falling into the hands of the NAACP lawyers. Aunt Alexandra tells Jean Louise that no one visits the “Negroes” anymore, because the NAACP has come down and convinced them to be “shiftless” and openly insolent to whites. She then went to go talk to her father, Atticus and they had a huge debate that lead to an argument. Anybody that walked in her path was told some ugly words, until her Uncle Jack put a stop to that. Jean Louise and Hank went on their date as she promised but she later cut that off but remained friends. In the book it was two settings that really caught my eye that was related to Public and Community health. First, Jean Louise was shaken when she finds a pamphlet in her dad's office, she hears her Aunt defending racist convictions, and sees both Atticus and Henry at a Maycomb Citizens' Council meeting. This all caught her off guard. She felt as if her family betrayed her. All along she was “blind” of what reality was. Racial private isolation is a principal reason for racial inconsistencies in

Get Access