She stated that Harper Lee 's racial prejudice and oppression is to kill miraculous democracy. "Have anyone defined it?" ... "Everyone has equal rights, no one has privilege" (Lee 248). Harper Lee's only novel that kills ridiculous birds is a fictional story about racial oppression in Messcom at from 1925 to 1935. It is based on loose grounds of the Scottsboro trial. However, unlike the story, racial discrimination and oppression of the novel accurately explains the situation in the 1920s and 1930s.
What? An article that killed Robin, William Haze Rit once said "prejudice is an ignorant child." In order to kill Moccardbird, author Harper Lee describes this idea through reality events. The three main types of prejudice are race, society and gender. As scouts and gems matured, they all saw their evil in the ancient town of Maincom in Alabama. In Mecombe, the same family lived there for a long time, so the same family inherited their ignorance from generation to generation, causing prejudice that affects so many people in the town.
In Harper's novel "Killing a Robin", Meikom is a city of prejudice, racial discrimination, and conservative views. Nonetheless, there are still several community members who believe in ethnic tolerance. As Alexandria's aunt missionary group has seen, the racial view of the town contradicts the ethnic tolerance of Atticus Finch et al. Obviously, Jem and Scout mature from a rustic naive to a respected member of the community, so Scout Finch needs to select the idea to adapt and kill robin to kill robin. Children's views on many developments Calpurnia, Mrs. Dubose, and Mrs Boo Radley are directly related to how the children of the two finches saw Maycomb and the prejudice it has. As a child, scouts and gems are simple responsibilities of minors,
Harper Lee's "Kill Mockingbird" is a heartfelt story that focused on the lives of two children living in small communities, such as racial discrimination, class differences, gossip. Harper Lee chose the small town of Maycomb in Alabama as a background of her story in the 1930 's where blacks were faced with racial discrimination everyday and were expected to respect white people in their community. There are many important themes in stories, such as racial prejudice, courage, family life, and so on.