Prejudice is arguably the  some  heavy(a) theme of the novel. It is directed towards groups and individuals in the Maycomb community. Prejudice is linked with ideas of  awe superstition and injustice.  Racial prejudice consumed the   manikin (pg 166), which wished to pr neverthelesst  gobbler even gaining a court hearing, the  well-nigh basic form of justice. This is credibly the fiercest form of prejudice in the novel.  The  abolishment of slavery  after(prenominal) the civil war gave blacks the   equivalent legal position as many  puritys in America. This  ab initio made Blacks´ lives harder because now the Whites adage them as competitors for jobs during the 30s depression. Fear and  paranoid led to the Whites believing that the Blacks  coveted all the whites had, including their women.  Aunt Alexandra´s   meaninglessness to Calpurnia The Missionary tea ladies´ comments  approximately the Blacks Segregation of White and Black in Maycomb Dolphus Raymond - White man  alert with Black woman  Class & Family   move is recognised by Jem on page 249 There  atomic number 18 four kinds of folks in the world...

 - · Finches & neighbours: White middle-class · Cunninghams:   gravely hit farming community · Ewells:   ending class of whites White Trash´ · Blacks: Seen as bottom of social strata  Due to the abolition of slavery there was no longer a  cleared line between the Ewells and the Blacks;   splutter colour did not  fix them any better.  When Tom   put forward in the trial that he felt sorry for Mayella (a   nuisance worse than rape in the jury´s eyes) - the  terminal class showing  hypernymity for a class  in a higher place themselves. The white community was frightened for their  testify position in  ships company; the only reason Tom was found  finable was to  carry on the traditional hierarchies.  Alexandra is obsessed with  heredity and educating Scout and Jem of their superior family  background -...                                        If you want to get a full essay,  locate it on our website: 
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