Racist Attitudes in Maycomb in To Kill a Mockingbird

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To what extent were the racist attitudes in Maycomb transformed by the Robinson trial? This book To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, was published in 1960 a. To Kill a Mockingbird Course Work To what extent were the racist attitudes in Maycomb transformed by the Robinson trial? This book ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ by Harper Lee, was published in 1960 and was about the bringing up of two children in a world without a mother and living in a fictional place where whites hated blacks in Maycomb, Alabama. The novel points out the shocking consequence of being black, i.e. not being able to school, forced to go to different churches. Some black people worked as domestic servants or had poorly paid jobs and the worst thing that happened was that if they were charged for doing something to a white person and it was false chances were that the court would find the black person guilty over the white person. After the trial racism still existed but there wasn’t as much as there was in the beginning. Before Tom Robinson’s trial there is a lot of racism towards the blacks. Whites are given more rights than the blacks because they can get successful jobs and can make black peoples’ lives misery by lying in court under oath about serious matters which can end up getting the black person killed. The people around Maycomb use a common word for a black person which is nigger. Scout does not understand about racism so she calls someone a nigger instead of a Negro because that what they say in school and in the neighbourhood but doesn’t understand why it is wrong. Scout also doesn’t understand about her father’s job, which was being a lawyer and that some people disagree with him defending the blacks and after Scout learns why she shouldn’t call black people niggers she was angry with Cecil Jacobs for saying that Atticus was defending niggers. Racism towards the whites is shown in the second part of the novel when Calpurnia Bring Scout and Jem to the church for black people, where Calpurnia’s friend Lula asks Calpurnia why she brought the children “I wants to know why you bringing white chillun to nigger church.” Towards the middle of the novel, Scout thinks that black peoples houses are warm, “neat and snug with pale smoke rising from their chimneys…” also “delicious smells about: chicken, bacon…” This shows that she understands that she knows that the negros are just normal people like herself and that she respects them and what they do. In this book I have noticed that there are is

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