To Kill A Mockingbird Impact

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“Miss Jean Louise, stand up. Your father is passing,” said the people of color in the upper balconies watching the Tom Robinson case to Scout, as her father walks past them (Lee 241). Harper Lee is the brilliant mind behind the story To Kill a Mockingbird, published in the year 1960. She lived through the great depression, and the segregation of black and white people, and wrote this story so she could express her views about it. This piece of literature created by the author is positioned during the time of racial segregation between black and white people in America. The story is set in the fictional county of Maycomb, Alabama, a tight knit community at the time of the Great Depression and the segregation laws are still in effect. To Kill …show more content…

In the story Atticus is the bigger man and respects Tom for what he is, and wants to help him, which further proves the the theme stated above. Likewise, Jem and Scout went to Calpurnia’s church with her, regardless of the fact that it was a church for colored people, and other white people did not go there (Lee 133-143). Secondly, Jem and Scout show their respect to Calpurnia by going to her church full of colored people. Furthermore, after the rape trial, Atticus still treated Bob Ewell with respect, even though Bob disrespected Atticus by spitting at him and threatening him (Lee 248). Lastly, the colored people show their respect to Atticus by standing, showing respect towards him regardless of what he is or where he came from, showing that the theme is stressed in the book. All people should be treated the same, regardless of the background they came from. Judging class, treating males and females the same, and respecting all people no matter what are the themes that the story, To Kill a Mockingbird shows the one who reads the story to better aid people to become better human