In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, racism grudges on Maycomb Ville’s society. Families collared by agony, struggle everyday to break free from the chains of poverty. Domestic violence eclipses the town as it conceals beneath the dark shadows. Maycomb ville’s conflicts all revolt into a drastic nightmare. In To Kill a Mockingbird , you unravel a generous amount of important life lessons. Throughout the book racism is shown as the climax; it takes a whole lot of courage to face it. Tom Robinson, an african-american, throughout the book is blamed and hated for his dark skin color, “Old Mr. Bob Ewell accused him of rapin’ his girl an’ had him arrested an’ put in jail” (Lee 164). Atticus, a lawyer, knows Tom Robinson is innocent. Atticus becomes …show more content…
Poverty plays an important role in To Kill a Mockingbird because it brings the novel to life. It gives real life situations some poor people today may be going through. Scout never complains about being poor; she is grateful with what she has already. This compares to when you donate something to the needy. There are people all around the world today living in the streets and are grateful even when you donate a dollar. Another key point is that Scout generously symbolizes the theme poverty as she characterizes in chapter one “There was nowhere to go, nothing to buy and no money to buy it with” (Lee 6). This quote phrases the fact that she is poor, so she doesn’t bother going out to shop. Instead her and the neighbors trade goods. Poverty influences Maycomb substantially because people are still living through the Great Depression. Many were left indigent and have to find ways to survive. One example is the Cunninghams family, “The Cunninghams never took anything they couldn’t pay back… they never took anything off of people, they got along with what they have. They don’t have much, but get along on it” (Lee 26). The Cunninghams are a poor, but also a happy family that will pay you back not with money, but with goods and satisfying items. As a result , poverty is a theme in To Kill a Mockingbird, and I believe it infiltrates knowledge into the reader about life and the society around