How Did The Great Depression Affect To Kill A Mockingbird

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Many authors emerged during and after the Great Depression to show the audience that America was completely changed by the Great Depression. One of the authors happened to write books after the Great Depression which showed the world a new view of the event that changed the world. Harper Lee was born on April 28, 1926 in Monroeville, Alabama. “the daughter of Amosa Colman Lee…the plot of To Kill a Mockingbird is based… on [her father’s] unsuccessful youthful defense of two African Americans on convicted murder.” (Fine). Throughout the book, Harper Lee depicted how she grew up in the start of the Great Depression which majority of her childhood consisted of racism and poverty in the characters and the setting she writes. Eventually on 1960, Lee was able to publish To Kill a Mockingbird which took off and changed the world with over tens of millions …show more content…
Because of this, author's living at that time like Lee were able to show how it was like to live back in the Great Depression. Parts in the book show racism in the story such as “Scout, said to Atticus, ‘nigger-lover is just one of those terms that don’t mean anything…ignorant, trashy people use it when the think somebody’s favoring Negroes over and above themselves… ugly terms to label somebody.” (144). Lee was able to describe different types of classes that were affected such as famer “are we as poor as the Cunninghams, not exactly. The Cunninghams are country follies, farmers hit them the hardest.” (27). The book To Kill a Mockingbird had a major impact on American Literature as it changed to American view from the new age of industrialism to straight poverty because of its way described of life. Never in American Literature did it see anything from a common person’s view of a tragic event that shook America up and change its course of