Harper Lee's novel To Kill a Mockingbird takes place during the Great Depression, which is about 50 years after slavery had officially ended. However, the town of Maycomb County was immensely segregated and prejudiced. As a result, many of the residents assume the characteristics of other residents through town gossip and rumors. Throughout the novel, many of the people’s opinions and ideas are greatly influenced by others because having a strong opinion on controversial issues in the town could lead to cruel consequences. The fear of being judged and rejected from society causes many of Maycomb County’s people to conceal the truth about the false gossip which leads to others misinterpreting and believing the gossip. Miss Maudie Atkinson, a young widow, is one of the few characters that displays her own individuality and protests against what she does not believe to be true. Miss Maudie's positive trait of bravery makes her an asset to the Maycomb community because through her individuality, she becomes a role model for individuals such as Scout Finch.
From the start of the novel, Miss Maudie's character was seen as a woman that was full of integrity and confidence. Even when facing unfortunate events such as a fire burning her house down, Miss Maudie is able to react to the crisis in a calm manner. Confused, Scout had expected Miss Maudie to be in the process of grieving the loss of her property, however, Miss Maudie appeared to be perfectly fine and faced the loss with a
Harper Lee's novel To Kill a Mockingbird occurs during the Great Depression. Despite the setting taking place fifty years after slavery had officially ended, Maycomb County is depicted as an immensely segregated and prejudiced town. As a result, many of the townspeople assume the characteristics of other residents through town gossip and rumors. Because having a strong opinion on controversial issues in the town could lead to cruel consequences, many of the residents’ opinions and ideas are greatly influenced by others. The fear of being judged and rejected from society causes many of Maycomb County’s people to conceal the truth about the false gossip which hoodwinks the others into misinterpreting and believing the gossip. Miss Maudie Atkinson, a young widow, is one of the few characters in the novel that displays her own individuality and protests against what she does not believe to be true. Miss Maudie's positive trait of bravery makes her an asset to the Maycomb community because through her distinctiveness, she becomes a role model for individuals such as Scout Finch.
The book To Kill a Mockingbird is historical novel that takes place in the 1930’s. In the book the author, Harper Lee, uses three characters to show how many hateful and racist people are in the town of Maycomb, Alabama. These three characters show how the town is racist and hateful towards them or their way of life. Tom Robinson is one of the three characters that was treated hatefully because he was african american.
Miss Maudie was Scout and Jem’s neighbor who they considered a friend because “she had never told on [them], had never played cat-and-mouse with [them],” and “she was not at all interested in [their] private lives” (59). Because of this relationship she had with them, Miss Maudie was able to provide an adult perspective on their problems that differed from
To Kill A Mockingbird depicts the daily occurrences in Maycomb County, an Alabama town in Southern USA. The story is set in the 1930s, when the people are mostly poor as a result of The Great Depression. Set in a time before the implementation of racial and sexual equality, the story provides insight on the mentality of the county people and their discriminative practices, which are aggravated by their difficult financial situation.
Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird is set in Maycomb, a fictional town in Alabama, in the 1930’s. Through its strong themes of racism and discrimination, the novel could portray a depressing view on life, but it’s outcome is the opposite. The novel shows great optimism and hope for the future through many reason, but largely centering with the perspective of the novel through a young child, Jean Louise ‘Scout’ Finch. Through her juvenility, she shows pure honesty and shows optimism through Jem and herself, their father Atticus and the well-known conviction of Tom Robinson.
Scout admires Miss Maudie because she treats her like a friend. Scout and Jem both “had considerable faith in Miss Maudie. She had never told on us, had never played cat-and-mouse with us, she was not at all interested in our private lives,” (Lee, 50).
To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, is a complex literary work exploring several aspects of the human condition. Lee’s story is one based in the 1930’s, shortly before the Civil Rights Movement. Her novel ventures into the societal issues, such as racism and gender stereotyping, in their fictional town, Maycomb. One recurring theme throughout the narrative is the social adjustment of the citizens of Maycomb and the human race as a whole. Lee showcases the progress in social justice matters by using symbolism and motifs.
Harper Lee, a novelist during the 1960s, wrote To Kill a Mockingbird as a form of media to help boost the civil rights movement. The novel takes place in the 1920s during the Great Depression, following our main character Scout Finch as she matures and learns about the town surrounding her in Maycomb, Alabama. Scout is the daughter of a controversial white lawyer who defends a black man, Tom Robinson. Tom Robinson's case becomes the center point of the story. Scout learns of the injustices in Maycomb's society which reflects on the society during both the 1920s and the 1960s, when this was written.
‘To Kill A Mockingbird’ written by Harper Lee in 1960 is a novel set in the fictional town of Maycomb, Alabama. The story follows Scout Finch, the daughter of Atticus Finch, a well-respected lawyer who is defending an African American man against the charges of rape. The characters in this novel are constructed in such a way that through their actions, appearances and attitudes the issue of racism in the 1930s arises quite clearly. Harper Lee has used the contrast between characters in certain events to inform and shape the readers view of just how bad racial issues were in society during the 1930s.
Background Information: In Harper Lee’s novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, she uses a mockingbird to represent Tom Robinson and the social injustice in the small, fictional town of Maycomb, Alabama in the 1930s, during the Great Depression. Claim:
The number one thing that society is best at is tearing one’s life apart for the most ludicrous reasons. In this great novel that Harper Lee had written, To Kill A Mockingbird, she had made it pretty clear that the story took place during the Great Depression in the 1930’s. It was clear that it had taken place during this time because of how she had explained the setup of things. Nobody in the town she lived in had a lot of money, and as she had explained, she just grew up in a small, poor town. Of course, the Great Depression had played a major role in this factor, though. As Lee had explained in the beginning of the book, ‘“Maycomb was an old town, but it was a tired old town when I first knew it… There was no hurry,
Benjamin Franklin once said, “We are all born ignorant, but one must work hard to remain stupid.” This is true, nevertheless we must also realize that everyone is also born ignorant to social issues, and if they do not see anything different they will remain blind to the issue. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is set in a small county, Maycomb, during the Great Depression. At this time there were many injustices within societies, especially those in the south. Harper Lee uses prominent social issues to show how one small thing can change a person’s point of view.
Why is To Kill a Mockingbird relevant? To Kill a Mockingbird is still relevant because today we blindly ignore racial inequalities, sexism, social inequalities, and also we learn and taught moral education. The novel To Kill a Mockingbird takes place of in 1930s and uses a perspective of a young girl to show various different kinds of stereotypes and various conflicts we still experience that are all still relevant today.
'To Kill a Mockingbird' is a novel that was written in the 1960s, but Harper Lee decided to set the novel in the Depression era of the 1930s in a small town in Alabama. Lee provided her readers with a historical background for the affairs of that time and in doing so she exposed the deeply entrenched history of the civil rights in South America. Like the main characters in this novel, Lee grew up in Alabama; this made it easier for her to relate to the characters in the novel as she would have understood what they would have experienced during the period when racism, discrimination and inequality was on the increase within the American society.
The novel, Maud Martha, written by Gwendolyn Brooks, is constructed from a series of vignettes focusing around the title’s protagonist. Maud Martha portrays the difficulties encountered with growing up as an African American female in the 1940’s in Chicago, through episodic plots. The milieu of the story is presented through chapters that envelope Maud Martha’s thoughts and aspirations as her trajectory shifts from being a daughter, to a wife, and then finally to a mother. Throughout the engrossing storyline the central character, Maud Martha, ethereally describes her reveries and her internal contemplations about her day-to-day life. She is unceasingly conscious of her lack of beauty, status, and charm, however; she constantly discovers ways