Segregation and Civil Rights Movement To understand the overall meaning of this novel, To Kill a Mockingbird (1960) is to come to terms with what it symbolized during the time that it was published. During the 1960's, African-Americans were still trying to fight for equal rights in the United States. They still did not have equal status, nor did they get treated as fairly or as well as Whites did during that time. To understand Harper Lee's novel from the time that it was published is to be able to put oneself back in that era where things for African-Americans in the South were as if they never changed from the time of slavery. Although slavery was outlawed at the end of the Civil War in the 1860's, these individuals were still going through a hard time trying to adapt to a society that clearly disliked them, and blatantly disrespected their rights as human beings. Things were still segregated, so even though African-Americans did have their freedom,...
They still felt superior than Blacks and segregation was a way of life (Loewen, 3-9). There was no such thing as one community; it was the White community and the Black community, and by far, the Black community did not have it as well as even the poorest Whites did. On a hierarchy scale, African-Americans were still seen as the slaves they once were, even though they still had their freedom.Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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