racism in to kill a mockingbird

Essay by firefox1996High School, 10th gradeA+, June 2014

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To Kill a Mockingbird Essay

"If there's just one kind of folks, why can't they get along with each other? If they're all alike, why do they go out of their way to despise each other?" (Lee, 259)

Harper Lee uses her novel 'To Kill a Mockingbird' to accentuate the catastrophic nature of racism. Some troubling individuals or groups of people have felt powerful by exercising their dominance over another group claiming they are worthier, stronger, and smarter. The problem of racism has often been associated with the history of the United States of America. Slavery has been abandoned long ago, but for years black people were considered to be of lower class, their capabilities were denied, and their dignity was completely diminished. It took American people hundreds of years to achieve the level of true democracy, when they can grasp the notion of equality between people, including acceptance of differences in gender, nationality, religion, culture, and what most matters in the book we read - race.

Discrimination can be shown through the Maycomb community, the Tom Robinson trial, and Boo Radley. As Scout's cousin told her, "He's nothing but a n*****-lover!" (Lee, 94).

Segregation could be noticed not only in the Maycomb County, but in the whole Alabama state, and the rest of Southern USA. Black people could not 'mingle' with the whites and their children attended separate schools. Adults socialized at places where they wouldn't be noticed or bother the whites (ex. the black church in Maycomb). They each had their own territories, and assumed it was immoral for them to fuse together. They would go out of their way, saying things such as "You ain't got no business bringin' with chillum here - they got their church, we got our'n" (Lee, 136). The whites and...