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To Kill A Mockingbird_Discrimination
Title: To Kill A Mockingbird_Discrimination
Category: Literature / Novels
Details: Words: 1373 | Pages: 5.8 (approximately 235 words/page)
To Kill A Mockingbird_Discrimination
What is discrimination? It’s an unjustifiably different treatment given to different people or groups. In To Kill A Mockingbird, discrimination was emphasized as a destructive force in the society by the author, Harper Lee. She proved that racial discrimination has a more severe consequence than social discrimination by comparing the treatment, appreciation and consequences of the two victims, Tom Robinson and Boo Radley.
Arthur Radley, who never emerged from his house, was a victim
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showed last 75 words of 1373 total
beginning of the human race and it was still an issue in a small town named Maycomb in the 1930s. In the book, To Kill A Mockingbird, the author accentuated her opinion that discrimination is a very destructive force. Through the comparison of the treatment, the appreciation and the consequences of Arthur Radley and Tom Robison, it was clear that the effect of racial discrimination is more dangerous than that social discrimination against an individual.
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