To Kill a Mockingbird
Have you ever commited a sin? If you are a living, breathing, human being, the answer is yes. Everyone, no matter what your race, religion, ethnicity, or gender has committed a crime against nature, whether willing or unaware. To Kill a Mockingbird, written by Harper Lee, elegantly and expertly displays this truth and many more. Through her unique dialogue, development of conflict, and promotion of deeper meaning. Lee tells a beautiful story from the eyes of a young, innocent white girl which touches the wayward hearts, the bias, and the prejudice of billions around the globe. This particular author uses many different types of conflict including the physical conflict between Mr. Ewell and the children, the internal conflict of Atticus Finch, and the social conflict experienced by Calpurnia to convey more depth in the story.
Calpurnia is a proud, educated black women who works;as the help, in the home of Atticus Finch. She is very fortunate to have the ability to read and write, however, this is also unfortunate in the fact that because she is literate she is now caught between two
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He is a single father and a very prominent lawyer in the small town of Maycomb, Alabama. Atticus is given a very controversial case about a young, black man who is accused of rapping a country girl form an unlinked family. This puts Atticus in a very hard position. Should he refuse the case and not be able to live with himself or should he accept the case and put his children through the hardship of dealing the bullying, anger ,and resentment that meant he might be able to save an innocent man from an unjust fate and know he did everything he could. This internal conflict leads to the main climax of the story and one of the main themes of the novel. Which is that ‘the right thing isn't always the easy thing but it's right