Loss Of Innocence In To Kill A Mockingbird

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To Kill A Mockingbird, written by Harper Lee, is a novel which utilises the symbolism of a mockingbird throughout the text. Mockingbirds are gentle, harmless creatures, therefore making it “a sin to kill a mockingbird” as Atticus so proudly announces. Lee depicts a dysfunctional American society with a narrow-mindedness towards racial segregation and inequality, and uses the imagery of the mockingbird to symbolise the destruction of innocence, This representation can be seen within Tom Robinson, who was killed by corruption within the system and racial prejudice, Boo Radley, who was slain by society’s judgement towards those who don’t conform, and Dill, who shows the happiness a mockingbird can bring, flitting in and out of one’s life, and then his loss of innocence after the trial.…show more content…
Tom was a kind and honest black man wrongly accused and convicted of a crime he did not commit. His downfall was his kindness towards Mayella and her wellbeing; a characteristic of a mockingbird. Staying in tune with his embodiment of a mockingbird, when Mayella approached him, he did not physically push her away, but instead fled the scene as the harmless mockingbird would. The people of Maycomb adopted the mindset of the custom of killing a black man accused of raping a white woman, and “when it’s a white man’s word over the black man’s word, the white always wins.”. This lead the jury to declaring Tom guilty, despite there being no doubt of his innocence. This verdict was the act of slaying a mockingbird; he was nothing but kind hearted, yet discriminatorily lost his life due to the town’s predisposition towards his skin
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