To Kill A Mockingbird The Color Line Argument

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To Kill a Mockingbird and “The Color Line” Argument

The ideas put forth by To Kill a Mockingbird support that life of the African-American society in the U.S. was made just as bad by the white society after slavery was abolished. There was little change in the African-American community’s quality of life. Even though some political rights for the African American community were established, they still suffered as the white community manipulated how those rights took place. They also went to great lengths to make all other aspects of the African-American society’s lives miserable, whether it be socially, economically, religiously, or in the case of law.
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee supports that the white community made life harder for the African-American community socially. In the court scene in To Kill a …show more content…

Gilmer has his cross-examination with Thomas: “’Had your eye on her a long time, hadn’t you, boy?’ ‘No suh, I never looked at her.’ ‘Then you were mighty polite to do all that chopping and hauling for her, weren’t you, boy?’ ‘I was just tryin’ to help her out, suh’” (Lee To Kill a Mockingbird). Not only is this derogatory, but as an example of white supremacist attitude, it also puts the whole African-American society in the position of the inferior race which would give them the pressure that would make them fearfully subservient. How Thomas addresses Mr. Gilmer, a white man, by “sir” further demonstrates the fearfulness of the African-American community under the self-given authority of the white community. Furthermore, in the court case, Thomas is harassed and humiliated for expressing genuine pity for a woman who happened

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