Discrimination in To Kill a Mockingbird
To Kill A Mockingbird “takes readers to the roots of human
behavior” (Lee). It portrays how unkind people of Maycomb County
could be. It shows a time when being different made life more difficult
than it had to be. It was a time when people did not accept differences. It
especially shows cruelty against blacks, lawyers, and the poor.
Discrimination against blacks is shown a lot all throughout the
novel. Maycomb County didn’t exactly
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as the “Cunningham’s” and the
“Ewell’s.” They weren’t very popular and lived off of what they could.
People said, “they’re not out kind of folks” (Lee 226).
In conclusion, To Kill A Mockingbird portrays how awful and
cruel people can be to one another and how discrimination and hatred can
feel the lives of people because of differences. “It can all turn out much
worse than expected” (Marney 110). This novel proves that.
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