Friday, May 29, 2009

In what ways is Maycomb the same as it was before Tom Robinson's trial in To Kill a Mockingbird?

Just as
Miss Maudie points out the day after the trial, inof 's , Maycomb has only
made a "baby-step" as a result of the trial.

In Miss Maudie's
view, Maycomb has made a baby step towards creating a more just
society because people like Judge Taylor did what they could to help Tom Robinson. Judge Taylor
did what he could by appointing , who likewise did all he could by putting his all into
defending Robinson. As Miss Maudie further points out, though it was impossible for Atticus to
actually win the case, he was at least capable of making the jury members think long and hard
about their decision.

Yet, Miss Maudie is perfectly correct in asserting
that Maycomb has only made a "baby-step," meaning that very little has changed because
the step is too small to even be noticeable. Maycomb is still the
same
with respect to its racism and
its other
prejudices
.

Racism is especially
seen in the townspeople's reactions to Robinson's death. According
to 's narration, the townspeople said very negative, racist things in reaction to Robinson's
death such as how it's "[t]ypical of a nigger to cut and run" and how, despite the
fact that Atticus might have been able to get a judge to overturn Robinson's sentence, it's
typical of someone like Robinson to "just run blind first chance he saw" (Ch. 25). The
townspeople's most racist comments reveal their prejudiced belief
that all African Americans are inherently evil and immoral, as we see in the
following:

Just shows you, that Robinson boy was legally
married, they say he kept himself clean, went to church and all that, but when it comes down to
the line the veneer's mighty thin. Nigger always comes out in 'em. (Ch. 25)


Even Maycomb's other prejudices remain
the same, which is why when Arthur Radley rescues the children by taking Bob Ewell's life,
Sheriff Taylor fears Arthur's exposure and talks Atticus into dropping the matter. As Sheriff
Taylor explains to Atticus, if Arthur is exposed for his courageous deed, which can easily be
misconstrued as evil by many townspeople, the townspeople would start knocking on his door
endlessly. Sheriff Taylor phrases his warning in the following:


To my way of thinkin', Mr. Finch, taking the one man who's done you and this town a
great service an' draggin' him with his shy ways into the limelight--to me, that's a sin. It's a
sin and I'm not about to have it on my head. If it was any other man, it'd be different. But not
this man, Mr. Finch. (Ch. 30)

Sheriff Taylor's speech
shows us that some people, like himself, have changed by becoming more open-minded; it's
open-minded to value Arthur's courageous action and want to protect him. Yet, his speech also
shows that there still exists in Maycomb a need to protect people like
Arthur
due to the prejudices of the vast majority of Maycomb's
people
.

Hence, like Miss Maudie said, though the town has
made a "baby-step," they still need to progress much farther to be able to relinquish
their racist and prejudiced views, and that major step may never really take
place.

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