Harper Lee - To Kill A Mockingbird - Episode 2 - Innocence, Motifs And The Power Of Language!

Published: Oct. 8, 2022, 5 a.m.

b'

Harper Lee - To Kill A Mockingbird - Episode 2 - Innocence, Motifs And The Power Of Language! Hi, I\\u2019m Christy Shriver, and we\\u2019re here to discuss books that have changed the world and have changed us. 

 

I\\u2019m Garry Shriver, and this is the How to Love Lit Podcast.  This is our second episode over that great American classic, To Kill a Mockingbird.  Last week, we introduced our author and both of her published books.  We compared them briefly, looked at the titles of each, and then focused more specifically on the origins and inspirations of Mockingbird.  We looked at Lee\\u2019s historical moment and argued that Lee\\u2019s novel, although set in the 1930s was far more interested in the world of the 1950s than the 1930s- a world struggling with civil rights.   We will develop the theme of racial injustice in the second part of the book, of course, but today as we lay the ground work for that part, we will continue our focus on part 1.  Last episode we ended our discussion talking about Maycomb, the tired old town where Lee set her story, a town which could be seen more like a character than an actual place.   Maycomb is a broken place and this brokenness is on display in several ways.  Part one only hints at the racial division that is the focus of the second section but that doesn\\u2019t mean it isn\\u2019t setting us up for it.  Lee carefully introduces several major themes and motifs then she proceeds to developed throughout and beyond the trial.  These themes should be considered as we read the section part of the book, for one reason because they provide a framework from which we should understand the insanity of the trial and its aftermath.  If you can\\u2019t understand Maycomb, you would not believe such a facade of a trial could even be possible.  So, Christy, can we say the primary role of section one is foreshadowing, then? 

 

No.  I would absolutely say not the primary role.  There is forshadowing, for sure, and it surfaces in many different ways, but it\\u2019s the the primary role.  Harper Lee is laying the framework for a larger discussion than race.  Race is the context, but she is framing the racial discussion that will come.  Maycomb is the microcosm of society at large- any society, not just the segregated South of her days.  The disease of racism, and she does call it a disease, has several causes, and it\\u2019s the cause of this disease that she\\u2019s exploring.  The first half is charming and disarming.  It\\u2019s less intense and emotionally jarring than the second.  The language gets more offensive the closer we get to part two, but she\\u2019s setting us up for how she wants us to understand the racism we will soon be exposed to, and what she thinks we can and should do to address it.   Her argument is nuanced and much of it is delivered through the words of Atticus and Calpurnia, although Uncle Jack and Miss Maudie weigh in as well.  It\\u2019s illustrated through the actions of the children as they interact with the different groups in their community: the Cunninghams, the Radleys, The Ewell\\u2019s and Mrs. Dubose.  Lee explicitly discusses man\\u2019s relationship with power, its use and abuse of it,  She blatantly spells out for us what a mockingbird symbolically represents and the principle protecting the innocent.  Atticus not only tells his children to learn to understanding the lived experience of those around them, but forces this lesson upon them in what comes across as a very cruel way to learn a life lesson.  The setting of part 1 is the playful existence of childhood innocence, but as we walk with Scout, we are to learn these same life-lessons before she forces us to apply them in this adult world of experience which is cruel and ruthless in many ways.   



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

'