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How Does Lee Create A Sense Of Tension In To Kill A Mockingbird

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In the story ‘’To Kill a Mockingbird,’’ I think the book really showed how the author experienced it and how everything was back then. The book was based on a trial of rape that took place during Harper Lee’s childhood and her home town, Monroeville, Alabama. The setting of the book ‘’To Kill a Mockingbird’’ in the fictional town of Maycomb, Alabama, during the 1930s is depicted through vivid language that conveys a negative connotation reflecting on the economic, social, and racial dynamic of the time. The time period is crucial as it sets against the Great Depression. The weather described in Maycomb is described as hot and humid, which creates a sense of tension. Lee uses vivid language to describe the town, describing it as ‘’an old town, …show more content…

Scout was sure that it was Boo Radley, Jem tells Atticus about the pants and the gifts. Maycomb is a racist white community, Atticus agreed to defend a black man named Tom Robinson, who has been accused of raping a white woman. Jem and Scout are subjected to abuse from the other children, even when they celebrate Christmas at the family compound on Finch Landing. Calpurnia, the finches cook, takes them to a local black church, where the warm and closed-knit community largely embraces the children. Atticu's sister, Alexandria, comes to live with the finches the next summer. Dill, who is apparently living with ‘’his father’’ in another town, runs away and goes back to Maycomb. At the trial, the children sit by the ‘’colored balcony’’ with the town's black citizens. Atticus provides clear evidence that can prove that Mayella and her father, Bob, are lying about the whole thing. Mayella had propositioned Tom, and was caught by her father and then accused Tom of rape to cover her shame and guilt. Atticus used the evidence on Mayella’s facial wounds that her father inflicted upon discovering her and Tom, who had beaten

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