Mayella Ewell is powerful in Harper Lee’s novel, “To Kill a Mockingbird”. When it comes down to class, race, and gender, Mayella holds a great quantity of power. Mayella Ewell is a poor, white woman that lives in a run down house by a dump. She has to care for her six other siblings because her mom left when she was very young and Mayella’s father Bob, is an alcoholic. Bob physically, emotionally, verbally, and sexually abuses Mayella. Mayella uses her class, race, and gender to her advantage to try and get herself out of her living conditions at home. She drags Tom Robinson, a black male, into a whirlwind of accusations of him raping her. Mayella has a huge advantage in the trial because of her class, gender, and race.
One of the three ways we see Mayella grow to be powerful is through her social class. Mayella's social class affects how much power she has. Even though she is a part of an extremely low social class, she learns how to make this have a positive effect on her growth of power. Mayella’s house is anything but glamorous, she lives behind the dump and the only thing that is cared for in the house is six red geraniums. These six red geraniums belong to Mayella representing her six siblings. Despite Mayella having six siblings, she does not get help with all the chores she has to do. Tom Robinson notices this and starts to feel bad for Mayella, so he helps her with them. However, Tom should not feel bad for her because she is white, and he is black. “‘ you’re a
In the small town of Maycomb, Alabama lives Miss Mayella Ewell. She is a smart but helpless teen that accuses Tom Robinson of rape to escape from her father's abuse. In “To Kill A Mockingbird”, Mayella is powerful, as defined by class, race, and gender. All though in many circumstances, Mayella's class and gender make her less powerful than most, her race makes her more powerful than substantially all negroes.
In To Kill a Mockingbird, Mayella is powerful based on class, gender, and race. The book shows us how she does have power, and gives supporting evidence. In this time period, in a small racist Southern community during the 1930’s, all of the categories listed are very important and contributes a lot to a person. Each category has its own reasoning why Mayella is powerful. Mayella has much more power than the other person in their situation, because of all of the listed evidence. Mayella is in a trial up against a black male, Tom Robinson, who she accused of trying to rape her. They were also caught by Mr. Ewell, Mayella's father. Therefore, Tom Robinson has little to no chance of winning the case based off class, gender, and race especially during this time period.
In Harper Lee’s, To Kill a Mockingbird, a young white woman from Maycomb, Alabama, named Mayella Ewell is charging Tom Robinson a black man of rape. Mayella Ewell is not powerful in the sense that she is classified within class, race, and gender.
Mayella does not have power because she is a white female, being the lowest class. Mayella is a white female living in Maycomb, Alabama. Mayella has some power being white, but not in her class and gender prevents her from having any power. Mayella is an eighteen year old taking care of her younger siblings. She does not have any power.
To Kill a Mockingbird was a very influential book in the eyes of a growing young woman in America in the 1930’s from the eyes of Jean Louise as a child and Jean reminiscing or reflecting as an adult about the past. Mayella Ewell was a white woman who was looked down upon by her own race and the African Americans were too scared to talk to her. Mayella was looked at to be powerless over her own life and others. If she is, then why does she win the case against Tom Robinson? In the town of Maycomb race, class, and gender played larger roles than some may think let's determine how.
She is used to living in a grimy house on an unsanitary property. Mayella selflessly operates at stage 6 when she grows the red geraniums on the Ewell property. Characters that behave at stage 6 operate with a sense of justice because they believe it’s the right thing to do, they may even break the law if they wholeheartedly believe it benefits everyone. In chapter 17, a character describes the Ewell property to be dirty and unsanitary but says, “against the fence, in a line, were six chipped-enamel slop jars holding brilliant red geraniums [...] people said the were Mayella Ewell’s (228). Mayella acts beyond her usual stinginess when doing this. She is trying to provide her and her six siblings with beauty so they can experience something out of the ordinary and lovely. Although the action of growing the geraniums isn’t breaking the law, it is going against the everyday filthy life the Ewells live. For once, Mayella isn’t thinking of herself, but of
In the book “To Kill a Mockingbird”, Mayella gained power in Tom Robinson’s trial. Power is having control over others. This book's main key points is Tom Robinson’s rape trial against Mayella Ewell. Class is how wealthy you are and how others see you. Gender did not give Mayella much power since she was a girl, and women back then did not have many rights. In the time of the Great Depression, race gives any woman or man power no matter who they are or their gender and class. In this book, you will see that class and gender play no role in power, but race gives Mayella all the power she needs.
Mayella is poor;therefore, she is not powerful in regards to her social class. The Ewells live in the dump near the negroes. When Lee writes,“He thought he’d be a hero” (Document A) he directly connects the idea that the Ewell’s low social class affects how much power they have or want to have. The Ewells thought that after they convicted a negro their social class would go up but they still lived in a dump. Due to her living in a dump people look at her like trash. Lee directly connects the idea of how white people in a higher social class think of white people in a lower social class:“White people wouldn’t have anything to do with her because she lived among pigs”(Document C). She lives in a dump and so they consider her trash and
Is Mayella Powerful? In the past, we lived in a large racial society where many White Americans did not accept African Americans as their equals. In Harper Lee’s ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’, the novel focuses on the story of a rape trial located in a non-existent town of Maycomb, Alabama. It’s about a black man, Tom Robinson, who is accused of raping a poor white woman, Mayella Ewell.
Race, gender and class have always been the key points of discrimination, it didn’t matter if you were white or a male, if you were in the lower class despite those categories you were treated poorly. That was the case for Mayella Ewell, A white female in the lowest class of her society. In the text Class, Gender and Race in; “To Kill a Mockingbird” is Mayella Ewell powerful? After reading the text, it was concluded that Mayella Ewell is in fact powerful. There are three divisions in this society.
Mayella Ewell is often mentally, physically, and sexually abused by her father Bob Ewell. Even though Mayella takes care of her siblings each day, she is lonely most of the time, considering nobody wants to be around her. Her father abuses her and beats her often, and Mayella wants the abuse to come to an end. Mayella comes up with and fulfills a plan to end the abuse coming from her father. Her plan involved a Negro man named Tom Robinson. Mayella accuses Tom of beating and raping her, and brings Tom to court, and goes up against him in a trial. Her plan was successful and came out in her favor because she was manipulative, and she knew what it took to win the trial. Mayella Ewell, a poor, white woman, who lives on a dump, is seen as
Mayella Ewell is a tragic character in To Kill a Mockingbird. She is faced with many struggles involving her family and the people around her. Although Mayella is a poor white woman with an abusive father, no mother, and six siblings to take care of she does have power. Mayella Ewell is powerful as a character and continues to gain power in Harper Lee’s novel, To Kill a Mockingbird when it comes to race, class and gender. Despite Mayella being very poor and in a lower class of the society in Maycomb Alabama she uses her status as a white female to manipulate others into deciding in her favor when dealing with her court case against Tom Robinson regarding him being wrongfully accused of
In the book “To Kill A Mockingbird”, Mayella Ewell is the conflict of the story. To challenge herself to see if she is powerful based on class, gender, and race. Mayella is powerful due to her race; however, she would not be powerful due to her class and gender. One might think she is powerful over all; however, she does not have power in the eyes of some readers. Proceeding on to see if Mayella has power in race.
Mayella may come off as an idiot because she “sat silently” when asked what happened (179). She also thinks Atticus is “mockin’ (her)” when he calls her “ma’am” and “miss” (181). But truly, Mayella is just a product of being alone, trapped, and forced to be independent. Without needed care and love she was forced to try to find it herself. Throwing herself onto Tom was an act of desperate need for attention. I think with proper care she could be like everyone else. There is also another side of her, one that does well with what she has. Mayella “tried to keep clean” (179). She also takes care of her flowers. Harper Lee created a character that is slightly relatable but truly understandable. The problems Mayella faces are more severe than needed to be relatable. But what you can understand is her situation. I feel like I understand her need for affection but I would not go to the extremes of throwing myself onto someone. The seemingly logical ways in which Mayella acts at times, make the readers feel sympathy for her. Even though we know she is lying and that the case was racist and unfair, it’s hard to blame her. The lying and
Mayella has no power or the upper hand on neither social class, and gender; although, she does have power in her race this is the only reason as to why she wins the trial against Tom Robinson. Mayella is stuck in an abusive household as a result of her inability as a woman to leave and begin a new life this leads to a big downfall for Mayella Ewell. She even struggles with meeting new people and communicating, due to her lack of social interactions. Mayella Ewell’s lack of social interactions is a direct result of her low class and the others looking down on her family. The only way Mayella is able to win anything in her life would only be because she is white. While race does not have the ability to determine power, a person must hold advantages in other components like social class, or gender to be considered “powerful”. Thus, because of Mayella’s disadvantages, she can never really be considered