Honestly It's for my people sounded a lot better than it's all for the mankind
Oh my god the finale of b99 was so amazing ❤🥰🥰
Imagine reading six of crows first then shadow and bone and finding out that the person inej and nina are literally praying to and think is sankta is actually not dead???? 😭😭
every day a tech startup invents a new and more deranged way to incorporate classic dystopian themes into your daily life
it’s always “wyd?” and never “i would come for you. i would come for you. and if i couldn’t walk, i’d crawl to you, and no matter how broken we were, we’d fight our way out together — knives drawn, pistols blazing. because that’s what we do. we never stop fighting.”
"It's a sin to kill a mockingbird because they do nothing but one thing and that is sing their hearts out to us"
Ok so recently I've been reading Harper Lee To Kill A Mockingbird and I was just about ready to give up, when that quote came up, and then I understood.
Society is still walking on a tight rope
Judging people and the likes just for their background
Like Tom Robinson who was accused of rape by the town's lowlife Mayella Ewel
And though no one ever believed them, they did she because of one simple thing
She was white and he was black
I asked my teacher why this was significant and she answered with "That's the point of the whole story. To show how unjust and unfair soceity was and still is"
He was the unseen, powerless object everyone had been fighting over
And then came Tom Johnson
I didn't understand why he was significant, why a dog getting rabies out of season was so important
I realized it was just symbolic
He became mad
Dangerous
And it all came back
He was used to represent Maycomb
And how people became "mad dogs" when something including a person of color came up
They became just like Tom
And it didn't matter that if it was in season or not
Diversity waits for no one
And this town was very much afraid of it
I understand the purpose of the book now
Why it was written
And why it says the things it does
This is what I got
When someone is still clutching the holds of the past, the same point of views, same words, and same ways, they become afraid. Afraid of the change and of the diversity. They become so closed off that anything involving a slight bit of change turns them into "rabid dogs"
Atticus tried his very damned best to defend Tom, because it was rare that someone wanted to take effort into defending a 'negro.'
He just took the first step
"Progress is impossible without change, and those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything
-George Bernard Shaw
If your ship isn’t perfectly depicted by a Taylor Swift song, is it really your ship at all?
Book: To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee)
Choice: Own choice, analytical essay
“I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.” These famous words, spoken by Martin Luther King Jr. relate deeply to the theme of prejudice in the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. The novel is a story of two children growing up in the small town of Maycomb, Alabama, during the Great Depression. It starts with them being innocent and carefree, and slowly growing up to notice and understand the evils of the world. In Maycomb, the most prevalent evil is prejudice. In a southern society like Alabama, prejudice is a very common thing, especially pertaining to African-American people.To Kill a Mockingbird is a juxtaposition between the biased society of Alabama and the impartial and innocent Finch family, who is headed by the tolerant and clear headed Atticus Finch. Harper Lee explores the theme of prejudice through symbols, setting, and minor characters.
An exceptionally effective section in the novel is the Tim Johnson scene which helps explore the theme that adults with the power of clear thinking, judgement, and bravery are to educate children on recognizing prejudice and preventing it through their actions. Subsequent to Atticus shooting Tim Johnson, Ms. Maudie tells the kids about how Atticus was a good shot. She remarks, “marksmanship’s a gift of god, a talent––oh, you have to practice to make it perfect, but shootin’s different from playing piano or the like” (Lee 98). Tim Johnson’s sickness symbolizes the disease of prejudice in the Maycomb county. The gun that Atticus carries and Atticus’s ability to shoot represents Atticus’s ability to kill the disease of prejudice. It’s quite challenging to stand up to prejudice the way that Atticus does. Ms. Maudie explains to the children that Atticus has a particular talent in that area, and spends time and effort to refine this talent. Although, as Lee inadvertently shows us, Atticus’s good aim is more than just marksmanship; it accentuates the bravery and tolerance that he is gifted with. Through this scene, the readers learns that the parents are the captains of their children’s thoughts. When they act with bravery and sound judgement as Atticus does, parents show their children to act the same. Lee shows that it’s the duty of the parents to teach their children tolerance and clear judgement. Then, and only then will children be equipped with the proper tools to fight prejudice.
Alongside the use symbolism to examine the theme of prejudice, setting is used to explore the theme of people with the skill of tolerance often needing to stand up to larger and often more powerful groups of people to ensure that prejudice does not dominate the actions of the group. When Jem, Scout, and Dill follow Atticus out the night before the trial, they find Atticus sitting outside the jailhouse. This scene is set on a dark street, where it is difficult to see much of anything. Even so, they are able to see Atticus, “a burning light in the distance” (150). Atticus has brought his own light and is seated outside the jailhouse. He confronted the mob that was intent on beating up Tom Robinson. In this particular milieu, the lighting distinguishes Atticus and the angry mob. Atticus, who is present in the light, represents his tolerance and judgement. This setting also symbolizes how he doesn’t give in to social prejudices. On the other end of the spectrum, the mob standing in the consuming darkness have been taken over by prejudice and aren’t thinking logically. Additionally, Atticus brought his light with him, which shows us that tolerance is something that Atticus carries with him. In this scene, Lee uses setting to impart to the reader that everyone can use tolerance to stand up to prejudice. Similar to Atticus carrying his light to tackle the mob, one can gain knowledge from such and carry tolerance in their own lives.
As well as setting and symbolism, the roles of minor characters are used by Lee to depict and explore prejudice. The theme of families without education, guidance, nor judgment are soon to give in to the dark side of society and become biased and prejudice is also explored in this novel. This theme is established the first time that the Ewell family is mentioned. Burris Ewell, a classmate of Scout’s, is first observed having lice in his hair and is described as “the filthiest human [Scout] had ever seen” (26). Burris only attends the first day of school every year, similar to all of his siblings. The Ewells live in a shack, alongside the town dump. Their father, Bob Ewell is hardly ever around and is mostly drunk, leaving his children to do as they please and run amok. The author develops this theme using the description of the Ewells. The children don’t attend school, instead they play all day while their father is away. This is a very obvious portrayal of the family’s lack of education, alongside their lack of parental guidance. Their father is constantly drinking, and the children are always filthy, which symbolizes their muddled judgment. The fact that their home is situated within the town dump is also a sign that the family feeds off of the trash of the society, taking in old mentalities that have already been disposed of by the present. These mentalities include prejudice, biased thinking and not to mention racism. The reader is shown that the Ewells are part of a cataclysmic cycle. They are sorely rejected by modern day society as their views have long since been deemed ‘socially unacceptable’. However, these views are the only ones that are allowed to them by society. The Ewells live on what the dark side of society throws away. Lee uses the Ewell’s reaction towards the events to form a “yin-yang” balance with the Finch family, and are indicative of the author’s intention to further develop the theme of prejudice in the novel.
It is through the use of minor characters, setting, and symbols that Harper Lee can explore her novel’s main themes. These three literary devices are what the author uses to best show the prejudice and bias of Maycomb county, Alabama. Jem and Scout’s journey to adulthood highlight the town’s prejudices and how it widely contrasts with their home. Nonetheless, Atticus doesn’t let society sink in on them; he is quick to teach them that, “the one thing that doesn’t abide by majority rule is a person’s conscience.” Even though children may face the struggles of prejudice every day, however big or small, it is ultimately up to each and every individual to do the necessary things in the fight against preventing prejudice.
I am lowkey gonna miss these quarantine days.