Examples Of Tradition In To Kill A Mockingbird

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In Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, tradition is notoriously known in Maycomb. Maycomb County, as portrayed in the novel is a poor, lonely area in Alabama, where the majority of people obey tradition. However, a single family that consists of two siblings, Scout and Jem and a lone father, Atticus Finch, is simply different. The family faces color discrimination from their own eyes throughout the whole novel. However, tradition and ongoing customs are what keeps this conflict going since the start. In Maycomb, as Scout and her town acquaintances grow older and tradition stabilizes, tradition develops to have negative effects such as interracial conflict. Furthermore, the Maycomb townspeople and sometimes even Atticus’s own relatives constantly bully him and his family as they continue to avoid society’s customs. When the Finch family visits their Grandma's house for Christmas, Francis decides to be a jerk and calls Scout a “...nigger lover…” (Lee 112), in an attempt to make fun of her. Scout’s own cousin unintentionally states respecting black people as a disgraceful act. In the local area, it is thought that white …show more content…

When the big day finally arrived, every evidence leaned towards Tom Robinson’s innocence, but Bob Elwell, the white man, still manages to triumph. After the case, Atticus admits “...when it's a white man’s word against a black man's, the white man always wins. They’re ugly, but those are the facts of life”(Lee 295). Essentially, Atticus reveals a Maycomb belief that any honest black man will always lose against any fraudulent white man. The jury still appoints Tom as guilty knowing well that Bob Elwell was the individual lying about the incident. Since conforming with black people was against Maycomb’s regulations in the 1930s, the information that Tom Robinson was black was all the jury needed to consider him liable of Mayella’s

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