To Kill A Mockingbird Good Vs Evil Analysis

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Good v. Evil
Harper Lee’s accounts of her experiences growing up have remained popular since their publication in 1960. These stories, which are neatly wrapped up and put into a novel titled To Kill A Mockingbird, have brought to light the truth of southern racism. Many believe we have a choice between “us and them.” Throughout the novel, readers question the idea whether people are essentially good or essentially evil. Is the choice between children of light and children of darkness a simple one? Lee answered this fundamental question, by showing that good and evil can coexist in the world and uses Atticus Finch and his children to expose the positive and negative human natures of the other characters.
Unlike the typical American family, …show more content…

When it came to the Ewell family, this was most definitely the case. Mayella Ewell, the lonely and abused daughter of Bob Ewell was the reason Tom Robinson was on trial. In respect to the Finch family, the Ewells were on the bottom of the totem pole (Lenhoff 20-23). In order to gain acceptance from her father, Mayella lied for him. While Tom Robinson was helping her out around her house, Mayella made advances on Tom Robinson. These advances were innocent, and Mayella was driven by desire. She desired to be desired by a man other than her father. Secondly, she yearned for love in other aspects. She wanted true love from a father figure; this is why she lies in the courtroom. She believed that if she did what her father said, if she took the sexual abuse, that maybe she would receive a true father-daughter relationship. Her actions were innocent, but she was driven by selfish means. Her father on the other hand, did not possess a single bone in his body that contained anything pure. Bob Ewell was the dirt of the town. He was drunk and unemployed, and he raped his own children. Mr. Ewell was the definition of white trash, and even Atticus Finch knew that. This is why when Bob Ewell spit on Attticus he did not even blink; he knew that Bob Ewell did not deserve a reaction from Atticus (Fulmore 32). Compared to Atticus, Bob Ewell has no understanding of good human nature. Sadly, there are a small number of people in the world that do not have morals, and Bob Ewell was one of

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