Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction

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    As Jean Finch or in other words Scout narrates the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, she creates a unique perspective on how she see’s everything. The book starts off when Jean is six in the 1930’s, yet her narration makes her seem like she embodies the wisdom of an adult. This is unusually since most of the kids in Jeans first grade class have been held back and still can’t read. Jean then starts off giving a little background information about her life and makes the reader conclude…

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    Symbolism Of Innocence

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    Harper Lee uses an extensive amount of symbolism in her novel To Kill a Mockingbird. The story is set in the quaint, little town of Maycomb, Alabama in the nineteen thirties’. Lee uses many of the characters in her novel to symbolize the stigmatizes of that time. She uses a mockingbird to symbolize the destructions of innocence. The mockingbirds of the book can by represented by Boo Radley and Tom Robinson. Boo was corrupted by the prejudice of the townsfolk of Maycomb County, and Tom Robinson…

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    Paul's View Of Beloved

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    In the novel Beloved by Toni Morrison,the author develops the male figures through point of view, their names and internal conflicts to convey to the speaker that the past has a crippling affect on one’s actions and their present as a result. “Beloved” by Toni Morrison moves among many perspectives, closing in a multitude of characters: third person limited, third person omniscient and first person in every character’s perspectives. The novel also changes tense - past to present. This…

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    Destroying Innocence To Kill a Mockingbird is a novel about prejudice towards people of different races, female orientation, and lower class. In the novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee reveals that even selfless people can face prejudice from others as seen through the characters of Atticus Finch, Tom Robinson, and Boo Radley. Firstly, Atticus Finch is a kind soul who only wants to help others, but faces prejudice for going against what his community thinks is right. The white…

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    In 1987, Toni Morrison published her novel, Beloved, examining the consequence of collective trauma experienced by many African Americans due to the monstrosity of slavery. The novel is based on the true story of a black slave woman, named Margaret Garner, who escaped her plantation and killed her own child in order to prevent her from returning to enslavement. In the novel, Margaret Garnet is portrayed by Sethe, who lives at 124 Bluestone Road with her only remaining child, Denver. The house is…

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    Maycomb, a town that prides itself on southern hospitality and small town values, but it has a dark secret no one adresses. This is the fact that these "values" breed cruelty to those who live in poverty, born a different race, or practice an extreme religion. In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird , Harper Lee displays cruelty through three different characters, all with different lifestyles. First, we are introduced to the Ewells. Bob Ewell, who is a notorious drunk, is bitter and outspoken. The…

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    The small, southern, town of Maycomb, Alabama is close-knit, only with the exception of a stranger living amongst them. A man by the name of Boo Radley has been a mystery to the town of Maycomb for many years. A social outcast with reclusive tendencies; Boo Radley’s troubled family history has caused him to be the source of town rumors and gossip. Clearly, Arthur (Boo) Radley lived a problematic life straight from the beginning. The youngest child of the Radley’s --- a strict, foot washing…

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    In Harper Lee’s novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, the author explores prejudice from the town through the use of a symbolic figure, mockingbird. Tom Robin is put on trial for the alleged rape of young Mayella Ewell, even though he is a kind man that is trying to help the young lady out. Boo Radley is victimized by the community based on town legends the the citizens of Maycomb have made about him, which forces him to live in exile inside his house. Atticus Finch is ridiculed by people for…

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    The novels To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee and The Merchant Of Venice by William Shakespeare are filled with prejudice and people being treated differently because of stereotypes. To Kill A Mockingbird is filled with a variety of characters, Jem, Atticus, and Scout Finch are a family in which part of the novel revolves around. Then there is Tom Robinson and Mayella Ewell, who are the two battling in court. The Merchant Of Venice also has a large assortment of characters. The play revolves…

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    The small town of Maycomb is filled with people struggling with their appearance and what people think of them such as Aunt Alexandra and Stephanie Crawford. These two ladies are among many wo gossip about all of the towns folk and no one even themselves could escape their rumors. Along with these over conscious busy bodies lay a rare breed of people, the mockingbirds. Atticus, Miss Maudie, Boo, and Tom Robinson are just a few of these beautiful people who don’t care what is said about them at…

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