Conflict is a process that can take place throughout days, months or years. It is a form of disagreement that evolves from an opinion and quality different from others. To Kill A Mockingbird written by Harper Lee, is an authentic novel that portrays conflict in many forms of difference, such as race, gender, family and health.
When Tom Robinson was claimed guilty for rape though there was enough clear evidence to leave him innocent, this took a form of racism. The Maycomb people had been racist towards Tom Robinsons race; creating an unpleasant conflict between the black and white people. “Tom was a dead man the minute Mayella Ewell opened her mouth and screamed”, Chapter 25, pg. 244. This conveys the conflict by explaining that as soon as someone would blame a black person, that would be the end of their life. The black people in Maycomb differed from the rest of the people because their colour on their skin wasn’t accepted; different physical appearance wasn’t accepted in the opinion of the white people.
To Kill A Mockingbird was set in the 1930’s; this was a time when many men viewed women incapable of being equal to them. Scout was the only female in the Finch family and she considered herself similar to men in the novel. “It nearly knocked the breath out of me, but it didn’t matter because I knew he was fighting, fighting me back. We were still equals”, Chapter 14, pg. 152. Scout was lived in a sexist era, although Atticus raised her as an equal. Living as an equal in the Finch family full of men made Scout look different towards the rest of the women in Maycomb, which lead to an unspoken conflict between the Maycomb families.
Jem was six and Scout was two when their mother passed away, leaving Atticus behind as a single man who hadn’t remarried. In the 1930’s it was considered unusual for a single parent to raise children, as when Atticus’ wife died he appeared different and abnormal to the rest of the...