To Kill A Mockingbird Court Case Analysis

Words: 406
Pages: 2

The court case in To Kill a Mockingbird is a major point in the novel, it introduces the gang to racism in their community and reveals much more about what the community and the main characters believe. Dill and Jem are two characters that both experience the court case, and their characters are both affected. Dill and Jem both think the racism and discrimination they see in the courtroom is bad, but they are more concerned with separate types of discrimination.

Through the course of the court scene we see how Jem and Dill have a similar reaction to the court case. For example, Dill says, “It ain’t right, somehow it ain’t right to do ‘em that way” (Lee 203) after seeing Mr. Gilmer talk to Tom Robinson like a second class citizen. Similarly,