Table of Contents
- 1 How does the Great Depression affect To Kill a Mockingbird?
- 2 What effect did To Kill a Mockingbird have on society?
- 3 Why do you think the author chose to set the story in the 1930s instead of the 1960s when it was written?
- 4 How does race play a role in to kill a Mockingbird?
- 5 How did race relations change during the Great Depression?
How does the Great Depression affect To Kill a Mockingbird?
The Great Depression is reflected in the poverty that affects all of the residents of Maycomb. Even the Finches, who are objectively better off than many of the other citizens in the area, are ultimately poor and living within the means available to them.
How does the civil rights movement affect To Kill a Mockingbird?
When Harper Lee wrote To Kill a Mockingbird, her home state of Alabama was a hotbed of civil rights activity. Her momentous decision sparked a yearlong bus boycott, giving new life to the civil rights movement and propelling Martin Luther King, Jr. to national prominence.
Why did Harper Lee Set To Kill a Mockingbird in the 1930s?
Although Harper Lee wrote To Kill a Mockingbird in 1960 she actually set her novel in the mid-1930s. This was a time when many white people, particularly in the southern states of America were racist towards black people.
What effect did To Kill a Mockingbird have on society?
Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird” has transported generations of readers to small-town Alabama in the 1930s and confronted them with a sobering tale of racial inequality in the Deep South during Jim Crow. Read by many students in middle school and high school, it has left a mark on innumerable lives.
Where in To Kill a Mockingbird does it talk about the Great Depression?
The second time that there is an allusion to the Great Depression is on the morning after the Tom Robinson trial in chapter 22. Tom’s father, friends, and community show their appreciation to Atticus for defending Tom in the trial by giving him all kinds of food.
How is poverty in To Kill a Mockingbird?
Their own poverty is best seen in Chapter 12 when Jem and Scout accompany Calpurnia to First Purchase Church: The church is unpainted, unceilinged and without electricity, and the congregation has to be coerced into giving up what little money they have to contribute to the family of Tom Robinson.
Terms in this set (22) Why do you think Harper Lee chose to set the story in the 1930s instead of in the late 1950s and early 1960s when she wrote it? She chose the 1930’s because she wanted to show the racial unfairness during that time.
Why was To Kill a Mockingbird so successful?
Biographer Shields said the novel found success in part because “it poses the fundamental question of how do I get along with people who are different from me?” In Mockingbird, Scout and Jem learn to empathise with Tom Robinson, the accused black man, and to understand the misunderstood recluse Boo Bradley.
How is Harper Lee life reflected in To Kill a Mockingbird?
Based on the novel, Scout lives with her brother and her father that is the reflection of the author’s life who lives with a single father. Scout also plays with Dill as her friend who lives at his aunt’s house which is the next door of Scout’s house every summer.
How does race play a role in to kill a Mockingbird?
Race plays a huge part in To Kill a Mockingbird, shown mainly as a black man is convicted of a rape he did not do because of his race. “In our courts, when it’s a white man’s word against a black man’s, white man’s always wins”, “as you grow older, you’ll see white men cheat black men everyday of your life” .
What are the issues in to kill a Mockingbird?
In the novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee addresses many controversial issues. Such issues as, racism, discrimination, and social class are explored. During the 1930s in the small county of Maycomb, the mentality of most southern people reflected that of the nation.
How is Tom Robinson characterized in to kill a Mockingbird?
He is a victim of racism, which was the major controversy in our culture at the time. Like Boo Radley, Tom Robinson is characterized by what the people of Maycomb county say about him. After being accused of rape, most of people see him as an evil beast.
How did race relations change during the Great Depression?
Racial violence again became more common, especially in the South. Lynchings, which had declined to eight in 1932, surged to 28 in 1933. Although most African Americans traditionally voted Republican, the election of President Franklin Roosevelt began to change voting patterns.