Comfortability is the pursuit of any human’s activities. One gets a job to pay for necessities that provide satisfaction. One pays for entertainment so that one may be happy and enjoy the time. Comfortable means to be eased and relaxed. Therefore, it would be reasonable to say no one desires to be uncomfortable. Education systems across the nation have been banning the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee due to the idea that it could make the reader “uncomfortable.” The novel accomplishes multiple themes that tackle social issues that include racism, classism, and the prevalence of deceit. Racism could indeed make the reader uncomfortable by surfacing unwanted, realistic social issues. Many find the idea of racism unsettling due to its …show more content…
The author utilizes Scout’s point of view to take a look at all of the common lies people have incorporated into their culture through an innocent, questioning lens. Scout sees the world as a bunch of adult lies and strongly disagrees with stereotyping that forces a false perception that people need to “behave accordingly”(Lee). The exposition of how frequently lies are used in society causes the reader to examine the daily life that they live which could provide an unsettling feeling. To even ignore the idea that humanity deceives itself and others becomes threatening to society because a “dismissal is a dangerous tool, because it’s nothing less than a lie”(Ericsson). However, the prevalence of deceit is not the main reason for the discomfort of the readers in To Kill A Mockingbird since deceit is encompassed by the more rattling idea of classism. The reason people will force their children to act a certain way is directly related to which social class they identify with. Lying has become a necessity for those left on the bottom of the economic and social ladder. The class system forces one to climb that ladder by any means possible since “unearned social advantages or disadvantages shape the life chances of most people”(Cohen). The prevalence of deceit strikes the reader with an uncomfortable feeling but classism forces the reader to take a look at themselves, their friends, family, and the history of the human race for how guilty they are of living an idea that they claim to