Theme Of Discrimination In To Kill A Mockingbird

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“Scout, I’m beginning to understand something. I think I’m beginning to understand why Boo Radley’s stayed shut up in the house all this time…” (227). Prejudice and discrimination are major issues that are present in the town of Maycomb, Scout and her brother Jem are young children who learn about the disturbing existence of the bigotry that they were previously unaware of in their familiar southern hometown throughout the trial of Tom Robinson, an innocent African American who is accused of rape by a white woman. To Kill a Mockingbird introduces a world that harbors prejudice against some of its very citizens and describes how discrimination was a major flaw in society and still is a flaw in the present day. The author, Harper Lee develops …show more content…

Characters like Calpurnia, who experience the discrimination due to the color of their skin know there are only “a handful of people in this town who say fair play is not marked white only; the handful of people who say fair trial is for everyone...the handful of people with enough humility to think, when they look at a negro” (236). Calpurnia enforces this theme by explaining that very few people in Maycomb care about its African American residents; only a few people believe in not having a bias over race in court trials and opportunities in life between African Americans and white people. By using this method of development, the author allows Calpurnia’s statements to provide a perspective that she has lived a life filled with these experiences and naturally she understands the consequences of the prejudice in Maycomb which has resulted in the unfair treatment of African Americans and the unfair verdict of Tom Robinson’s trial. This account establishes the theme that discrimination leads to consequences and the unfair treatment of a group of people which brings pain and suffering to innocents like Tom Robinson who was wrongly accused but still deemed

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