Slavery in To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

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It Leads You the Right Way, So it Should Stay

“Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body.” (Sir Richard Steele) Reading expands the mind’s capacity for knowledge. It gives us a different outlook on the world. Reading lets us live in a completely different version of life, unlike our own. To Kill a Mockingbird is a very flavorful book. It gives us insight on the old times, back when racism was still a big problem. It tells us how they lived their lives during the Great Depression. It's not only a life story, but it is a history lesson. This story is a fine addition to our reading curve. If people read, it can give people a brief description of history, descriptive language that entices listeners and readers and can teach people lessons for everyday life.

A large majority of people attending school say that it is boring. Take history for example, it isn’t the most enjoyable subject to some people. It isn’t taught in a way that is appealing to the population that it is being taught to. Students slowly become uninterested as the instructor rambles on about the lesson that is being taught. The information just goes through one ear and out the other. Why should students have to sit and listen to what seems to be pointless? Is there no different way to teach history? There is, in fact, a way to make it more interesting, and that is hiding it in plain sight. Instead of feeding students information, why can’t they feed themselves? They can if they read To Kill a Mockingbird. In this novel, Harper Lee tells the readers about the life of two children, Scout and Jem Finch. Even though it’s about the lives of children, the book still tells of The Great Depression and its attributes. Also, on a slightly higher level, it tells about...

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...m in trouble. Sending him to jail would be the same as killing a mockingbird.

People all over the world need to learn the lesson that Harper Lee was trying to teach in this novel. The important lesson Harper has taught is that reading is a big key in life. If people didn’t read, then people wouldn’t learn about the racial segregation that took place long ago. They wouldn’t even know about the conditions of a small county during their darkest period of time, The Great Depression. Without reading, how could people learn about the simple, but true quote, “...remember it’s a sin to kill a mockingbird” (Lee 119). If we did not read books like this, then we would not learn the power that descriptive language has on people. This book is a great fragment of our learning curve and should stay in our learning cannon, so more students can become as advanced as Harper Lee.

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