Essay: Harper Lee raises the issues of prejudice and injustice in To Kill a Mockingbird, but does little to solve them

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To kill a mockingbird is one of the most critically acclaimed novels of all time, set in 1932 Alabama. Harper Lee, the author, raises the issues of racism and injustice, though she offers little to solve these issues.  

To kill a mockingbird highlights a certain group of characters throughout the novel. This is the group of the “mockingbirds”, those that are on the receiving end of injustice and racism throughout the novel. Some of the “mockingbirds” are the main characters, Scout and Jem. Other “mockingbirds” are Tom Robinson, Atticus Finch, Calpurnia. The “mockingbirds” are the innocent characters, but that does not mean that the rest of the town are innocent. In fact, many are far from it.

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To kill a mockingbird carries the reader on an extraordinary odyssey through the fires of prejudice and injustice in 1932 Alabama. Scout, the narrator, is an embodiment of Harper Lee’s younger years. Through her eyes, we see a town split over an accusation, a lonely soul who the children are obsessed with, and one mans quest for vengeance. Scout Finch lives with her brother, , and their widowed father, , in the sleepy Alabama town of Maycomb. Throughout the novel, these three characters become intertwined with many other members of the town, spinning together a web of adventure, prejudice, ...

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