The notorious page 174 of 'To Kill a Mockingbird' has develop into a meme and everybody who had to learn it aloud at school is aware of exactly what it is.

Mustafa Gatollari - Author

Harper Lee's American vintage, To Kill a Mockingbird, is hailed as one of America's greatest literary works and manages to blend issues of racism, social, and prison justice problems in addition to the criminal system whilst weaving all of this together from the perspective of an grownup girl narrating the events of the tale, but as a younger lady. 

It sounds a bit complicated, however it just works. It's a book the defies genre and is a classic for a reason: it is damn, rattling good. And so is Gregory Peck in the film adaptation of the radical, too.

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So why is Page 174 of 'To Kill a Mockingbird' a meme now?

If you might have read the e book then you understand that the plot has a lot to do with racism. The guide was once controversial when it was once first revealed in 1960 and it nonetheless continues to ruffle people's feathers till this very day. So you'll best believe what Harper Lee had in mind when she was once writing some of the more discriminatory characters in her now-iconic guide, which is set within the 1930s South.

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The protagonist of the ebook, Atticus Finch, was based off of Harper Lee's personal father, Amasa Coleman Lee. The Alabama attorney, like his literary counterpart, represented black defendants in a trial that was in large part publicized.

In the e-book, Atticus is defending Tom Robinson, a 25-year-old hard-working and honest cotton field worker who is married with youngsters. He's accused of raping Mayella Ewell, after she's stuck trying to seduce Tom via her father.

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Shout out to Mr Kronk for never saying the n-word when reading To Kill a Mockingbird

— Madelyn Kahler (@KahlerMadelyn) May 19, 2020

Mayella and her dad make the declare that Tom aggressively got here on to her, and Atticus has to navigate a minefield of discrimination to be able to get the information right about what transpired between Tom and Mayella. Overtly claiming a white lady is attracted to a black man is just about blasphemous in 1930s Alabama, which makes Atticus' process nearly impossible.

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Cancel culture twitter would read To Kill a Mockingbird and be like “OMG Harper Lee wrote the N-word in her e book this whinge cancelled byeeee *posts a bunch of fancams of Korean boy bands no one cares about*”

— Banana.slugs (@ariolimax_) May 20, 2020

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The ebook, as it takes position in such a racially charged period of time, options language that is downright reprehensible nowadays, especially with the cavalier use of the "n-word" that a lot of characters within the novel use freely. Like when Francis, a younger boy, calls Atticus Finch a "n----r lover."

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My favourite guide is to kill a mocking chicken particularly page 174.

— emilramos31 (@emilramos_31) May 20, 2020

On page 174 of the ebook, the "n word" is used, so on every occasion any individual in school is requested to read that phase aloud, it is all the time a annoying moment amongst scholars and teachers.

In truth, it is so arguable that some school districts have banned the e-book from being a section of reputable college curriculums all over the country.

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When I was growing up, my eighth grade English instructor addressed the use of the be aware in the book and defined the time frame through which the book was written, in conjunction with the setting of the book and what social phenomenons Harper Lee was addressing.

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However, everyone's enjoy with the e-book and how its material is treated varies a great deal at the atmosphere during which the guide used to be learn. And a lot of the memes which have been spawned from the notorious "Page 174" reflect this variegated reaction to Harper Lee's usage of the notice.

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Some other people sadly spotlight how sure scholars have been "excited" to say the notice aloud or even sadder, is how some teachers don't even cope with the use of the word and just say it aloud.

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Still can't get over my JC English magnificence when a (white) lady in my class used to be studying a scene from To Kill A Mockingbird the place Atticus is called a "n*gger loving bastard", reads the n note aloud comfortably however skips over the notice bastard as a result of she did not need to swear in school

— megan🌙 (@megarushe) May 21, 2018

Others highlighted the bizarre mental gymnastics their classmates exercise while studying the guide. Like this one Twitter consumer's classmate who had no downside pronouncing the notice, however had a giant time gripe with uttering the phrase "bastard."

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When we needed to read “To Kill A Mockingbird” in English and my teacher pulled me and the opposite black girl in class apart and mentioned “I do know this is hard to hear” pic.twitter.com/rTWVo8jJwM

— KungFuChey (@cheyenethomas1) October 29, 2019

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Others even recorded a school room incident where a pupil requested their instructor to prevent announcing the "n word" whilst studying To Kill a Mockingbird. It changed into a giant native news story.

RACIAL SLUR IN CLASS: A trainer at Mustang High heard announcing a racial slur again and again while studying the ebook "To Kill a Mockingbird". A scholar in school asks her to stop whilst secretly recording the dialog. How the varsity and parents are reacting this night on @kfor at 10. pic.twitter.com/hBhPiIeQBP

— Peyton Yager (@peytonyager) November 23, 2019

The controversy surrounding the unconventional persists to at the moment. I mean, here we're in 2020 and persons are making memes about it, in any case.

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