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Examples Of Contextual Considerations In To Kill A Mockingbird

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My understanding of contextual considerations in To Kill a Mockingbird, written by Harper Lee, developed through the interactive oral as it shed light on other people's perspectives on the novel. My ideas were consolidated by what was said during the group discussion, however, there were also very different perspectives that I had not considered. Our group discussed a range of contextual considerations in the book, but the standout ones were historical and biographical. My understanding of what influenced Harper Lee to write this particular novel was developed after collaboratively discussing the fact that To Kill a Mockingbird mirrors her life, whereby her life matches the life of the novel's storyteller, Scout. For instance, both Lee's and Scout's fathers' were lawyers who represented African-Americans, who eventually died, convicted of murdering a European-American woman. Moreover, Scout's brother, Jem, was four years older than her, and similarly, Harper Lee had an older brother who was six years older than her. Both were raised in a small country town in Alabama - the only difference is that Scout …show more content…

Among the Gothic elements, such as gloomy and haunted settings, in To Kill a Mockingbird are the unnatural snowfall, the fire that destroys Miss Maudie’s house, the children’s superstitions about Boo Radley, the mad dog that Atticus shoots, and the ominous night of the Halloween party on which Bob Ewell attacks the children. These elements, out of place in the normally quiet, predictable Maycomb, create tension in the novel and serve to foreshadow the troublesome events of the trial and its aftermath. In my opinion, these very events were what I found most interesting, and were what kept me

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