My school has this elective course called "to kill a mockingbird" -
I was wondering what do you think we would study about?
( It's the first time they offer this course, starting next year, and they didn't provide any details)
I wanna know if I should join the course or not...
"To Kill a Mockingbird" course?
- Posted:
- 3+ months ago by lu-friday
- Topics:
- school, study, course, mockingbird, schools, meaning, help, subject
Responses (2)
To Kill a Mockingbird is a coming-of-age story of Scott Finch and her brother, Jem, in 1930's Alabama. Through their neighborhood meanderings and the example of their father, they grow to understand that the world isn't always fair and that prejudice is a very real aspect of their world no matter how subtle it seems.
The main theme is that of racial injustice, where Scotts father,Atticus, is a respected and upstanding lawyer in small Maycomb County. When he takes on a case that pits innocent, black Tom Robinson against two dishonest white people, Atticus knows that he will lose, but he has to defend the man or he can't live with himself. The case is the biggest thing to hit Maycomb County in years and it turns the whole town against Atticus, or so it seems. Scout and Jem are forced to bear the slurs against their father and watch with shock and disillusionment as their fellow townspeople convict an obviously innocent man because of his race. The only real enemy that Atticus made during the case was Bob Ewell, the trashy white man who accused Tom Robinson of raping his daughter. Despite Ewell's vow to avenge himself against Atticus, Atticus doesn't view Ewell as any real threat.
Tom is found guilty, sent to prison where he is tragically shot dead trying to escape.
Through the events of those two years, Scout learns that no matter their differences or peculiarities, the people of the world and of Maycomb County are all people. No one is lesser or better than anyone else because they're all people. She realizes that once you get to know them, most people are good and kind no matter what they seem like on the outside.
This last paragraph is what your course is likely to be about.
I have cut, pasted and added a little this from www.bookrags.com/notes/tkm/
Thanks so much!
This really helped me, I appreciate it!
Its Scout Finch not Scott.
Should you take the course, yes in fact everyone should!