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Examples Of Foreshadowing In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Dylan Kean Mrs. Vande Guchte Honors English 10B 5/13/24 To Kill a Mockingbird Symbolism Essay “You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view. until you climb into his skin and walk around in it” said Atticus (Lee, 39). Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird takes place during the Great Depression in Maycomb County, Alabama. This novel follows a young white girl called Scout Finch and her experiences as her father, Atticus, a lawyer, takes up the challenge of defending a black man in court. Accused of raping a white trash girl named Mayella Ewell, Tom Robinson faces grave danger as a black man facing a Deep South jury in the 30s. Foreshadowing is where an author gives a hint in some way to an event later …show more content…

When the trial comes up, Atticus gives an amazing defense for Tom, showing how Tom couldn’t have committed the crime and making it clear that there was no evidence against him, but the town is still corrupted by racism. The fire foreshadows the hatred and conflict growing over the trial. During the night of the fire, the peaceful Maycomb County is awakened and stirred up, foreshadowing the effect the trial will have on the town. The Fire, the hatred, starts to destroy part of their town, and some help to fight it, but destruction is still caused. With the trial coming, Maycomb, a very friendly and peaceful town, is disrupted by the spread of hate and division over the trial. Scout narrates, “A jury never looks at a defendant it has convicted, and when this jury came in, not one of them looked at Tom Robinson” (Lee 282). This quote shows the final resolution of this trial, as the damage of the fire, the hatred, is done and Tom Robinson is found guilty. It also shows the conflict over the trial, with many people being led by racism, but also that fire is beginning to be put out as people start to understand how wrong the trial

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