The Role Of Segregation In To Kill A Mockingbird, By Elizabeth Lee

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In the 1930’s the concept of segregation was introduced since slavery had just been abolished. Segregation is the action or state of setting someone or something apart from other people or things. The african americans were segregated from the whites through facilities, services, and opportunities such as housing, medical care, education, employment, and transportation along racial lines. By 1960 the racism and segregation was still just as strong as it had been as soon as the slaves were set free. When they were released many chose to stay in the south instead of moving north where they had a better chance at having a successful life. I assume it was because the south was all these slaves had ever known and it's where they felt comfortable. In the book To Kill a …show more content…

In The Help it not only showed the role of African Americans in the White’s lives but also the role of them in the White’s community. I think the biggest example of this would be when Elizabeth Leefolt built Abilene a separate bathroom outside the house. She justified this action by saying that African Americans carried different diseases than whites. The Help and To Kill a Mockingbird are more similar than they are different. They both focus majorly on the injustice towards the blacks. Blacks always had to address the whites with Miss, sir, ma’am. If they were ever disrespectful to the whites they could be punished or put in jail. Many times if a black offended a white the white could just trump up a charge. Almost every time this would work because the police would always take a whites word over a black. Many times the whites would take matters into their own hands. They would intimidate or humiliate them publicly. They had many methods of punishment but among the most common were lynchings and property destruction. Roughly one hundred and eighty two blacks were lynched between 1930 and