To Kill A Mockingbird Gender And Power Essay

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Race, class, and gender can interact to create power. Race can interact to create power by people thinking that they are better than someone else, because of skin color, or ethnic background. Class can interact to create power by some people having more money than others. Gender can interact to create power, by one of the genders thinking that it is better than the other, or that the other gender could be weaker. In Harper Lee’s novel To Kill A Mockingbird Mayella Ewell is a girl that is accusing a black man, Tom Robinson of raping her. Mayella is not powerful, because she is only powerful unless she is accusing someone of something.
Mayella doesn’t have power with her gender, because her Dad is controlling her and taking advantage of her. Mayella’s Father tries to intimidate her during the trial, “Mayella looked at her father, who was sitting in his chair tipped against the railing. He sat up straight and waited for her to answer.”(Lee B). How Mr. Ewell is acting shows that she does not have power with her gender, because her Dad is trying to intimidate her. Mayella’s …show more content…

Even though Mayella won the trial people still thought of her as low class, “He thought he’d be a hero, but all he got for his pain was . . . okay, we’ll convict this Negro, but get back to your dump.” This situation shows that Mayella does not have power with her class because Mr. Ewell thought that after the trial everybody would think he is a hero and look up to him, but instead everyone still looked down on him. Nothing for Mayella changed after the trial, because people still thought of her as low class, “Maycomb’s Ewells lived behind the town garbage dump.”(Lee A) This shows that Mayella does not have power with her class, because she is still low class after the trial. Mayella does not have power with her class because no matter what people still look down on

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