Ava Williams
Ms. Box
Block: 3
27 Oct. 2017
Historical Events in To Kill A Mockingbird
The Great Depression, a time of fret and panic. Men hustling throughout town, doing anything in their will to find a job to support their families. The Depression was an enormous downfall for the United States during the early 1930’s. A colored man or woman during this era had hateful rules that disrespected their race. Harper Lee used real-life events as inspiration for her novel To Kill A Mockingbird. The novel is narrated by a young girl named Scout. Throughout the book, she encounters many events that have shaped America. She witnesses a trial between a black man and a white man and the horrid collapse of our nation. There are connections to the Jim
…show more content…
The Jim Crow laws were laws that segregated African American people from the rest of the population during the late 19th century. Many of the Jim Crow Laws affected African Americans lives daily. A few of the laws stated in “What Was Jim Crow?” included that no colored barber should assist to white girls or women “(Pilgrim)”. All passenger stations must have separate waiting rooms for the different races. “(Pilgrim)”. If African Americans ever broke these laws they would be arrested. There would be no questions asked, immediately the colored man would be convicted for committing the “crime”. African Americans could also risk losing their homes, jobs, even their lives if they broke these unnecessary rules argues “(Pilgrim)”. Citizens of Lee’s fictional town also referred to as Maycomb, Alabama abided by the Jim Crow Laws. In the book, Jem and Scout did not attend school with Tom Robinson’s kids. The children went to different schools. In the courtroom, colored and white people were …show more content…
Radio Diaries. NPR: 06 Aug 2010. Radio.
Edmonds, Molly. "How Riots Work" 12 July 2011. HowStuffWorks.com. 03 February 2015.Web.
Lee, Harper. To Kill a Mockingbird. New York :Harper Perennial Modern Classics, 2006. Print.
Pilgrim, David. “What was Jim Crow?” Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia. Ferris State University. September 2000. Web. 15 February 2011.
Routledge,Clay,Ph.D. "Exploring the Psychological Motives of Racism." Psychology Today.
PsychologyToday.com,31Aug:2010. Web. 2 Mar. 2013.
Schaefer,Jack,Ph. ''Racism: A Power Struggle by a Different Name." Psychology Today.
PsychologyToday.com, 19 May 2011. Web. 2 Mar. 2013.
Smith, S.E.. "What is Mob Mentality?" Wise Geek. Conjecture Corporation, 07/06/2012 Web. 1 Aug
The Jim Crow laws were laws that kept people of color still under whites as well as separate them. Such has a white’s only restaurant, different baseball leagues based on colored, colored couldn’t show displays of affection, whites and color couldn’t dine together, and other laws that ridiculously limited colored folks. These laws were also dangerous or at least the punishments were brutal. Anyone who broke or defy these laws would be arrested or lynched.
When The Strange Career of Jim Crow was first published in 1955, it was immediately recognized to be the definitive study of racial relations in the United States. Professor Woodward discusses the “unanticipated developments and revolutionary changes at the very center of the subject.” Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. referred to the book as the historical bible of the civil rights movement. The Strange Career of Jim Crow won the Pulitzer for Mary Chestnut’s Civil War and a Bancroft Prize for The Origins of the New South.
Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird is set in the sleepy, southern Maycomb, Alabama. A small town in the grips of 1930’s depression, To Kill a Mockingbird spans a period of three years following young Scout Finch and her family through their experiences with racism and prejudice. Jim Crow laws were a series of ordinances the prevented equal treatment of African-Americans. Beginning with the end of Reconstruction in 1877 and remaining in effect until the Civil rights movement of the 1950s, Jim Crow laws governed where colored people could live, work, eat, enter and exit a building, and use public services. “Jim Crow laws grew from theories of white supremacy and were a reaction to Reconstruction,” explained Andrew Costly of the Constitutional Rights Foundation, “In the depression-racked 1890s, racism appealed to whites who feared losing their jobs to blacks.” Ensuring that freed slaves remained weak and inferior, Jim Crow laws revoked black freedom’s and crippled their rights. And while not explicitly stated, evidence of Jim Crow Laws appears methodically throughout To Kill a Mockingbird. Strongly influenced by elements of racism, the story paints a vivid picture of life in the era of Jim Crow, for both colored and white.
Have you ever thought about what inspired Harper Lee to write her novel To Kill a Mockingbird? Lee was inspired by the real world events that happened around her. The scottsboro trials influenced her. The murder of Emmett Till made her thoughts pliant on her thoughts about the relationships should be between blacks and whites. The way Jim Crow laws were carried out created a different view of the way black people should be treated by whites.
Harper Lee is well known for her great contributions towards modern society through her astounding book, To Kill a Mockingbird. The novel is read world-wide, in high schools and colleges because of its in-depth look at the social classes in the south during the 1930's. The book was influenced by society, in particular the social order of the south during her childhood. Lee grew up during this time of controversy which is why she writes so passionately about the topic. Lee wrote the novel to make a point about race while basing much of the plot off a trial from her young age, her own father, and the society she grew up in.
Jim Crow laws were a complex system of laws and customs that separated races in the South. They were very restrictive to African American people, and lenient to Caucasian people.
The Great Depression was a devastating time where millions of Americans lost their jobs and their homes (McCabe 12). Not only did the Great Depression influence the writing of her novel, Harper Lee used other historical events to influence the creation of To Kill a Mockingbird. The Jim Crow laws, mob mentality, and the Scottsboro trials are some of the historical events that inspired To Kill a Mockingbird.
The Jim Crow Laws were a harsh set of laws set in the early 1800s due to a fictional character known as Jim Crow. The white government passed these laws because they couldn’t accept the differences between them and the African Americans. Jim Crow was a very dark skinned character with a goofy outfit and very thick lips, the way that the whites portrayed the blacks racistly and stereotypically back then. These set of laws made life very hard for the African American race.
Jim Crow laws were laws that were in place from 1866 up until the 1960’s. These laws were meant to enforce the principle, “separate but equal” which was meant to bring equality to the races while minimizing the interactions between them. These laws created separate but unequal environments for the races. They supported the idea that the white race was superior to others and they created a constant state of fear in the lives of countless African Americans. (Pilgrim, Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memrobilia 2000)
Jim Crow laws were the act that legalized segregation between blacks and whites back in the late 1800’s. These laws were mainly enforced in the southern states. They were created to separate blacks and whites from having even the slightest bit of contact. Some JIm Crow laws were no interracial marriage, blacks and whites had to go to separate schools, and use different tools, and also go to different hospitals. Everything that went one between the blacks and the whites had to be different. This essay will go over what some of the specific Jim Crow laws were, and how it affected the people in the united states.
Mob mentality is when a group of people usually mad form together and make a very dangerous situation. The group usually ends up being violent and can get easily out of control. Some people join the mob mentality from peer pressure or the need to fit in (Smith 1). The article points out that being in a mob can make people feel like they are invisible or that their actions will not have consequences (Edmonds 1). When reading To Kill a Mockingbird people experience mob mentality first hand.
Jim Crow Laws were laws that were used to mandate racial segregation. The segregation consisted of places such as schools, restaurants, bathrooms, housing, public places and also the United States Military. This has impacted African Americans both mentally and physically. In the 1960’s, the Civil Rights Movement was aimed to put an end to the Jim Crow Laws, which were later repealed. Racial Profiling continued to survive.
To Kill a Mockingbird book has many consequential and life changing events to assist in the structure of part one of the story. Moreover, Jeremy and Scout are becoming more mature in nature as these events impact their knowledge on specific incidents. Three important events identified are Mrs. Dubose, Ol' Atticus and the fire. This event allows Mrs. Dubose and Jeremy to develop a relationship after Jeremy destroyed her camellias.
Constructed and doesn’t exist otherwise, and if human beings don’t have to be afraid of one another, then where does racism come from” (41)?.
the prisoners were lucky enough to escape the being lynched when they were moved into Scottsboro. In this trial, nine young, black boys were charged with the rape of two white girls while on a train. This case was a major source of controversy in the 1930’s. “Despite testimony by doctors who had examined the women that no rape had occurred, the all- white jury convicted the nine, and all but the youngest, who was 12 years old were sentenced to death” (“Scottsboro”). The boys’ lawyer, Samuel Leibowitz, did not even get assigned to the case until the first day of the trial. “If he could show a jury that these nine boys were innocent, as the record indicated, the jury would surely free them. To Leibowitz, that was simple!” (Chalmers 35). However, it was not that simple. Many white citizens would not change their minds about