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To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee - Justice Essay example

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To Kill a Mockingbird Justice One of the themes in ' To Kill a Mockingbird' is injustice. I am going to show how other characters apart from Tom Robinson are affected by injustice. Two of the characters affected in this way are Boo Radley and Mayella Ewell. Boo got into the wrong group of friends and one night they stole a car and locked Mr. Conner in the courthouse out house. The judge decided to send them to a state industrial school but Mr. Radley thought this was a disgrace. He promised the judge that Boo would cause no further trouble and he would take care of it. The judge trusting Mr. Radley agreed and let him punish his son. His whole life is affected by the injustice he suffered when he was a child. Boo Radley …show more content…

People make unfair gossip about Boo e.g. 'Miss Stephanie claims that she once woke up to see Boo at her window'. This cannot be proven the writer uses 'claims' to show that it has not been verified. The children have come up with there own image of Boo from the gossip they have heard. Jem says ' he is six and a half feet tall, judging from his tracks; he dined on raw squirrels and any cats he could catch…' This speculation has come from no where. Miss Maudie however, in chapter 5, sticks up for Boo telling them not believe everything they heard. Says the legends about Boo are ' three fourths coloured folk and one fourth Stephanie Crawford' and that she knew Arthur as a boy: ' He always spoke nicely to me, no matter what folks said he did.' The first two quotes are based on gossip and the only one who actually knew him said he was always nice. This shows how unfair/ unjust Boo has been treated by the people who live in Maycomb. Maycomb have both social and racial divisions. Mayella wants to aspire to more she is just being held back by her father. The geranium’s is an example of this, she tries hard to look after herself and keep things tidy but her family holds her back. Atticus proves that Tom Robinson was not the person who beat her up but it was her father. She is too scared to speak out she is stuck and she can't see any way out. In Chapter 22 Bob Ewell spits on Atticus, another indication that

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