Atticus Finch Prejudice Quotes

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Galileo, a brilliant physicist, who experimentally discovered many well-known entities, such as the acceleration due to gravity, a constant -9.8ms2.This knowledge was never known to him. He had to observe and experiment. Like Galileo, no one is born knowing, but rather learns from observation. Such learned traits that typified the South in the 1930s included racism and prejudice. Drawing from these very same ideas, Harper Lee conveys the theme that prejudice and bias, especially in the form of racism, are learned by behaviors from observation through the characterization of the Jem, Scout, and Francis in her novel To Kill a Mockingbird. Looking at the way Lee characterized Jem, the son of Atticus Finch, we see that he was not racist and this was due to his teachings from his father a man he periodically idolized. Firstly Lee showed us that Jem was not biased towards either race in anyway by showing us that he full heartedly believed that Tom Robinson would be found not guilty, but like a very limited amount of people in Maycomb, Alabama, he was rather upset to find that Tom …show more content…
Lee makes the theme crystal clear to understand with Francis. "Grandma says it's bad enough he lets you all run around wild, but now he's turned out to be a nigger lover we'll never be able to walk the streets of Maycomb agin" (Lee 83) Francis was already a arrogant and irritating child but after the quote her traits were really amplified. This quote also shows that he was clearly exposed to evident racism. A little after that comment to Scout, Lee showed Francis's character show his truly irritating side by having him run away and yell "He's nothin' but a nigger-lover!" (Lee 83) to Scout and Jem. With this second quote, again, we can clearly see that he is racist. Essentially, Lee has shown Francis to be racist with a the exposure of a racist