Theme Of Justice In To Kill A Mockingbird

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William Penn once said, “Right is right, even when everyone is against it, and wrong is wrong, even if everyone is for it.” Therefore in To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee disagrees with how society treats some people lower than the scum on the bottom of your shoes and others like they are the queen of England. Throughout the book, you see Scout grow up and learn that not everything in the work is sunshine and rainbows. The reader learns what life was like in the 1930’s during the Great Depression for a young girl living in the Deep South. Lee uses a child’s perspective, Scout Finch, and the morals of her home town to show the inequality of the justice system.
Lee uses Scout’s experiences with Tom Robinson’s trial in order to highlight the unfair

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