To Kill A Mockingbird Essay On Racism Is Real

486 Words2 Pages

Racism Is real Racism is a popular topic in modern day society as it is in Maycomb, Alabama. Throughout the whole novel, it presents life as such a wonderful topic, that nothing can possibly go wrong with it. However, things do, the novel presents to Scout and Jem a controversal topic: Racism. They discover that their whole community is surronded by racist white people. As racism isn’t developed it’s taught, They begin to struggle with trying to be a child. To kill a mockingbird, bluntly put, means to kill innocence. Scout and Jem begin the novel by stating their mischievous childhood adventures, how they played, how they acted, and how they felt. “A boy trudged down the sidewalk dragging a fishing pole behind him, enjoying summertime.” (Ch.31) The quotation introduces one blunt argument, Should Children be introduced to racism, as at the beginning Scout has no idea what color is. "Well how do you know we ain't Negroes?" (Ch. 16. Pg. 78) Jem and Scout here try to figure out how society divides people up into races, and what happens when those divisions break-down. …show more content…

Just like Boo Radley, Tom Robinson was also a long standing victim of the racism in the town. Tom is falsely accused of robbing and raping a white woman, Even when Atticus gave him one of the best defenses he could, that still couldn’t save him from a rigged. Tom can’t take the racism eventually and eventually commits suicide by cop. “To Maycomb, Tom's death was typical. Typical of a nigger to cut and run. Typical of a nigger's mentality to have no plan, no thought for the future, just run blind first chance he saw.” (Ch. 25. Page 25.) Evidence that futhor supports that assumption was that