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To Kill A Mockingbird Analysis

Decent Essays

“People generally see what they look for, and hear what they listen for”(232). In To Kill a Mockingbird, by using imagery and point of view, Lee suggests that it is wrong for people to be treated differently based on stereotypes, which leads to discrimination. In the book, we have a character named Boo Radley who is judged a fair amount of times without actually getting to know his background. Also we have a man named Tom Robinson who is wrongfully convicted of a crime he did not commit based on the color of his skin, which shows how the jury were discriminative against him. Every time someone makes assumptions on other people based on stereotypes, they will be treated a different way because they are looked at a different way. In the text, the first big stereotyping of someone is Boo Radley. Everybody looks at him like he is some kind of monster that only stays in his house to do inhumane things. An example of this is when Jem uses imagery to describe Boo, ‘“Boo was about six-and-a-half feet tall...he dined on raw squirrels...his hands were bloodstained”’(16). This quote uses dark imagery to give the reader an idea of what the characters thought of Boo, by using diction such as “raw” and “bloodstained”, it gave a negative tone to the description of Boo. The imagery of dining on raw squirrels gives the impression that Boo was some type of madman because no one in their right mind would do something like that, the author made sure she used words with negative connotations

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