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Influence Of Moral Growth In To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee

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Factors that influence our moral growth is based on what society thinks. Experiences that help us judge what’s right and wrong are our morals and based on what society thinks. In To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee a women named Mayella Ewell falsely accuses Tom Robinson of raping her. Throughout the story it shows how much society can impact what you believe in and racism. “The negros having waited for the white people to go upstairs, began to come in” P.g 218. Based on what people thought of blacks in Maycomb, they weren't aloud to be treated as equal as whites. People treated blacks bad based on what society thought and judgment. Back then if your family member or close friend treated a black poorly, you did too. White’s thought it was right to treat them poorly because they didn’t have the same skin color. …show more content…

In Maycomb blacks had to let whites get privileges. If you were white and friends with a black person people didn’t look at you the same. They have a lot of tension at the beginning of the book because Mr. Ewell thinks he is better than the Finches.Tom Robinson is a close family friend to the Finches.The tension becomes more real between the two later on in the book because Mr. Ewell’s caught his daughter Mayella kissing Tom and Mr. Ewells is making her accuse him of rape. Mr. Ewell was a very bigoted man. When he saw Mayella and Tom kissing downstairs he knew he had to do something about

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