Theme Of Prejudice In To Kill A Mockingbird

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INTRODUCTION The text To Kill A Mockingbird written by Harper Lee and was published in 1960. Harper Lee was born on April 28, 1926 in Monroeville, Alabama. In 1959 she finished the manuscript for her Pulitzer prize winning best seller To Kill A Mockingbird. In the high school, Lee developed an interest in English Literature. Lee was a member of the literary honor society and known for being a loner and an individualist. She did make a greater attempt at a social life. Lee was accepted into the university’s law school, which allowed students to work on law degrees while still undergraduates. Returning to her law studies, she dropped out. She soon moved to New Christmas present to support her for a year so that she could write full time. The…show more content…
After working with editor Tay Hohoff, Lee worked on a manuscript set in a small Alabama town, which eventually became her novel To Kill A Mockingbird. The novel reflected racial prejudices in the South. There are many layers of prejudice that Lee exposes in her novel. In 1930’s education for blacks was not so important and that time racism was at a high point. The law stipulated that blacks use separate entrances into public buildings, have separate restrooms and drinking fountains, sit in the backs of the train and buses. Even for the blacks people each and every thing is different from the white people. Like they were not allowed to be served food in the same room in a restaurant, play the game together, share the same prison and the most important thing they can’t get educate with each other they educated separate or get educated by ownor by their family. It strongly affected to the blacks people. Every law was not applied in every state, but the Jim Crow laws were demoralizing and far reaching, all in the name of protecting white culture and power erstand the complex history of race relations in the south. She wrote To Kill A Mockingbird in the midst of…show more content…
Although the blacks did have school, even though segregated, they could not get a higher education. They lived in a culturally segregated world. Blacks were considered to be less equal that the whites around them. Throughout the novel, to immersed in this environment we can understand that why the characters do what they do and say what they say. Atticus is often referred to as a “nigger-love”. It is extremely, racist to those of us in the modern world today. Further more we get to know when calpurnia takes the children to church that many of the black people in town are uneducated, illiterate, and have a hard time finding a lot of work in town and a few people in the church have been taught how to read and write, such as calpurnia who in turn taught her children how to read and write. We also get to know about how calpurnia speaks differently between her work life and her home life, which speaks to how the other blacks in her community would treat her. Unfortunately we see a lot of racism being spread by the towns people, and it’s strange to think about how this was the social norm a little more
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