"Compare to kill a mockingbird and scottsboro trials" Essays and Research Papers

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    tried‚ and they may have been lynched before they got the chance. Today‚ all trials are judged fairly‚ and all courtroom roles can be of whatever race. The influence upon Harper Lee to write her novel‚ To Kill a Mockingbird‚ was based on real life events. These include the Scottsboro Trials‚ expectations upon women in the South‚ and Jim Crow Laws. The first real world event that motivated Lee to write her novel is the Scottsboro

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    was writing about the trial of Tom Robinson in “To Kill a Mockingbird‚” she had a very real case to look to for inspiration. The trial of the Scottsboro Boys was a world renowned case in the 1930’s in which nine black youths were accused of raping to white girls in Alabama. Lee’s novel took this case and created the fictional case of Tom Robinson‚ a black man accused of raping a lower class white girl in a small town in Alabama during the Depression-era. The Scottsboro trials were the main source

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    The Scottsboro Trial and the trial of Tom Robinson are almost identical in the forms of bias shown and the accusers that were persecuted. The bias is obvious and is shown throughout both cases‚ which took place in the same time period. Common parallels are seen through the time period that both trials have taken place in and those who were persecuted and why they were persecuted in the first place. The thought of "All blacks were liars‚ and all blacks are wrongdoers‚" was a major part of all of these

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    Amber Jazwiecki Mr. Rosenbaum P-3 February 21‚ 2011 English Research To Kill a Mockingbird 1. The Scottsboro Trials are about when 9 black young men were arrested for assault and later raping two white women on a train coming from Paint Rock‚ Alabama. Later the court found all nine guilty and they were sentenced to death. A few years later the public found out that the white women were lying but only one of the men were retried and that one man was sentenced to life in prison for not

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    The historical Scottsboro Trial and the fictional trial of Tom Robinson in the book To Kill a Mockingbird have striking similarities that may or may not be coincidence. Both trials took place in Alabama during the same era of relentless prejudice and bias‚ which is a major factor in each of these cases. In both cases‚ the accusers were white women and the persecutors were black men; therefore the black men were immediately considered liars and “wrongdoers”‚ unlike the word of the white women‚ which

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    Tom Robinson vs Scottsboro Boys The book To Kill a Mockingbird symbolizes how a community of decent human beings can be corrupted by simple commonplace stereotypes within society‚ the Scottsboro trial is a real life example of how even in the 20th century individuals were scapegoats of this malicious prejudice. This type of prejudice united the most ignorant Americans into the absurd trail of thought that African Americans were‚ in some way‚ inferior to even the most uneducated Caucasian due to

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    The Scottsboro Boys were nine black teenagers accused of rape in Alabama in 1931. The landmark set of legal cases from this incident dealt with racism and the right to a fair trial. The case included a frameup‚ an all-white jury‚ rushed trials‚ an attempted lynching‚ and an angry mob; it is frequently given as an example of an overall miscarriage of justice. On March 25‚ 1931‚ several people were hoboing on a freight train traveling between Chattanooga and Memphis‚ Tennessee. Several white teenagers

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    To Kill a Mockingbird and The Scottsboro Boys Imagine sitting in a court room as a black man. You are put on trial for something you never would have even though about doing. You look around at an all-white jury. You have little hope of getting out of this situation being ruled innocent‚ but you don’t give up. This is exactly what happens with the Scottsboro Boys. The Scottsboro Boys trial of the 1930’s parallels many of the events in Harper Lee’s Novel To Kill a Mockingbird. The Scottsboro

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    Monroeville accused a black man named Walter Lett of raping her. The story and the trial were covered by her father’s newspaper‚ and Lett was convicted and sentenced to death. After a series of letters appeared claiming Lett had been falsely accused‚ his sentence was commuted

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    The Scottsboro Trial

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    Tom Robinson and the Scottsboro Boys: Victims of a Racist Society in the 1930s It is shocking how a country has the audacity to proclaim an innocent person guilty while knowing the truth. People are so suddenly blinded by their biased opinions and can’t seem to accept the truth. This is shown in the The Scottsboro Trials‚ which was a series of trials that involved nine Negro boys that were accused of raping two white women. The trial was actually a false allegation‚ of which the two white women

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