Examples Of Injustice In To Kill A Mockingbird

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As one matures, their gentle and welcoming shelter is defiled by a horrifyingly prejudiced reality to test the emotional endurance of youth’s morals as they attempt to overcome staggering racial divisions while breaking free from the past’s shielding ignorance. Unable to separate his individual emotions to significant situations, Jem attaches himself passionately and with confidence to his childish ignorance of the surrounding realities and thus mislead to a gruesome and dark disappointment. Persistent justice would prevail in To Robinson’s favor, as Judge Taylor’s voice rang out, the verdict reverberated through the courtroom,, a personal pain and realization provoked Jem, “his hands…. white from gripping the balcony rail, and his shoulders jerk[ing] as if each “guilty” was a separate stab between them” (284). Unlike most, Jem had been childish enough to …show more content…
Pressured by his curiosity and maturity, Jem must endure the blinding phenomenon he had been sheathed from for so long and face the harsh truth of the world before him, a bleak divide suddenly displaying itself. Tormented by the tragic decision against the poor Tom Robinson as decided by prejudice, Jem begins to question the foundation of which Maycomb is built upon, his initial "thought Maycomb folks were the best... in the world [or so] they seemed," but from the experience he delves into philosophical investigation of how despite being alike, the varying folk continually "go out of their way to despise each other" (288, 304). The entire façade of the town Jem had grown and witnessed the change of has begun to decompose before his own eyes, riddled with holes of questioning and an unrepairable void manifesting from a life-changing trial with an action greater than it