Prejudice In To Kill A Mockingbird

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“It is not a person or situation that affects your life; it is only the meaning you give to that person or situation…” stated by Shannon L. Alder. Which shows that it depends on how that person will handle the situation and apply it into his/her life. In the book, To Kill a Mockingbird, written by Harper Lee is about a young girl who throughout the book explores the idea of prejudice. Precisely due to her father, Atticus, who is going to defend Tom Robinson who is a African American man and prove his innocence for a false actuation. From start to finish the readers get to see the unraveling truth behind prejudice with a different perspective. The narrator of the book is a girl, named Scout, who has an influential impact on the readers to understand the lessons told through a young child’s point of view such as her …show more content…

Throughout the book she learns more each and every day and realizes how racism is a powerful and big issue in small southern towns. People in small towns have strong morals and beliefs when it comes to race. For instance Scout questioned about her teacher to her older brother, “Jem, how can you hate Hitler so bad an’ then turn around and be ugly about folks right at home--” (331). Scout is fully aware of her surroundings and what is going on around her. In which she is slowly growing up and is gaining more knowledge about the real world. It helps the readers understand of which how children are actually aware of the surroundings. Also on how people act towards certain topics such as her teacher having two total different point of views on race. In which shows Scout has a powerful impact on the readers and makes them look at a different perspective on how people would act in certain situations, and to just be curious and wonder why. Even for Scout’s age she asks extraordinary questions in which shows her just being a kid and questioning

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