To Kill a Mockingbird
To kill a mockingbird
What is "Maycomb's usual disease" that Atticus hopes that Scout and Jem will not contract? EXPLAIN
What is "Maycomb's usual disease" that Atticus hopes that Scout and Jem will not contract? EXPLAIN
Atticus mentions Maycomb's usual disease which is prejudice and racism. This sickness is very much a part of the American South and Atticus knows it is difficult to cure. Atticus hopes that he can navigate his kids around the racial ugliness that is taken for "normal" in Maycomb, "people go stark raving mad when anything involving a Negro comes up." Indeed, his children do look to Atticus which gives the reader a bit of hope in the end.