Vyhledávání

Unknown Story

Zkopírujte tento scénář
Unknown Story

Storyboard Text

  • As the plot of TKAM progresses, Tom Robinson's life quickly becomes a main focus as his trial becomes the foundation for changes in the character development of Scout and her brother, Jem. Though at the end of TKAM, justice is not served to Tom himself, his story challenges us to look at our social surroundings, cultural influences, and see how our overall beliefs about justice and morality hurt the people around us.
  • They Shot him. During their exercise period...Seven bullet holes in him.
  • Tom Robinson And The Portrayal of Justice( Chapter 25 )
  • I guess Tom was tired of white man's chances and preferred to take his own
  • The verdict of this jury is that the defendant, Tom Robinson, is guilty of all charges.
  • SHOOT HIM!
  • Though in the past, Boo Radley, is seen as a criminal, his "crimes" in chapter 30 were far from unjust and wrong. In fact, the killing of Bob Ewell's is described as being beneficial to the community around them. Despite Boo's record, his actions are seen as not needing a punishment, especially because he has been punished for his past since he was a child and has been permanently scarred from it.
  • Boo Radley: Justice was "overlooked"? ( Chapter 30 )
  • There's a black boy dead for no reason, and the man responsible for his death is dead. Boo did his utmost to prevent a crime and I think it would be a sin to put him into the spotlight for it.
  • God d*** it! I'm not thinking of Jem! Your boy never stabbed Bob Ewell
  • I won't believe it!
  • Chapter 10
  • Your father's right, mockingbirds don't do one thing but make music for us to enjoy. They don't eat up people's garden's, don't nest in corncribs, they don't do one thing but sing their hearts out for us. That's why it's a sin to kill a mockingbird.
  • Jem and Sout develop many of their morals and values from their father Atticus and those of influence in their community. Here we see an example of how Scout's sense of justice was put into perspective with the guidance of the adults in her life.
  • I'd rather you shoot at tin cans in the backyard, but I know you'll go after birds. Shoot all the bluejays you want, but remember it is a sin to kill a mockingbird
  • Chapter 11
  • Here we see the idea that we are born with a sense of right and wrong being explored. Jem see's Mrs. Dubose disrespect of and degradation of Atticus and knows that how she is behaving is wrong. So, despite knowing his father would disapprove, Jem decides to enact his own idea of justice on Mrs. Dubose by destroying her front yard.
  • She said you lawed for n***** and trash.
  • Your father's no better than the n****** and trash he works for!
  • Payback Time
  • Why'd you do it?
  • After the trial, Jem is outwardly seen as distressed. When he talks to Atticus, a wisdom is shared that if the court were made of of young men such as himself, the results would be different. Even though we imagine justice as being inherently a fair concept, in reality as demonstrated in TKAM- "justice" is reliant upon whoever is enacting it. In TKAM the reality of what justice means changes depending on the culture worldviews of a certain group. Jem and Scout's view of justice is centered around the idea of equality, so if they were the one in the jury Tom would have recieved a fair trial. However, because the men on the jury believed that justice was a concept built for only the white man, and that justice was built around whether or not the person on trial was one of "them", the results of Tom Robinson's trial were skewed to reflect those racist beliefs.
  • Chapter 23
  • The verdict of this jury is that the defendant, Tom Robinson, is guilty of all charges.
  • If you had been on that jury,, son, and eleven other boys like you, Tom would have been a free man.
  • No sir, they outga do away with juries. He wasn't guilty in the first place and they said he was.
  • When we look at the outcome of Bob Ewells life, most would say that justice won in the end. Bob with pleasure unfairly had a man imprisoned and framed for a crime that he committed. Not only that, but he also went out of his way to kill the children of the lawyer defending this innocent man. So, in the end Bob was killed, and though we may think that all murder is wrong, the killing of Bob Ewell provided safety, relief, and a sense of justice to those whom he had wronged.
  • Chapter 29
  • SHOOT HIM!
Vytvořeno přes 40 milionů storyboardů
K Vyzkoušení Není Potřeba Žádné Stahování, Žádná Kreditní Karta a Žádné Přihlášení!
Storyboard That Family