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  • Bob Ewell Character Analysis in To Kill a Mockingbird | SparkNotes
    Bob Ewell, the patriarch of the Ewell family, is the antithesis of Atticus’s character and represents the lowest socioeconomic class among the white citizens of Maycomb
  • Bob Ewell Character Analysis in To Kill a Mockingbird | LitCharts
    Get everything you need to know about Bob Ewell in To Kill a Mockingbird Analysis, related quotes, timeline
  • The Role Of Social Class In To Kill A Mockingbird | ipl. org
    The novel To Kill a Mockingbird is based in a small town called Maycomb, Alabama where a young white woman called Mayella Ewell lives with her father Bob Ewell The Ewells are thought of as the lowest class because Bob Ewell spends all his checks on liquor and does not support Mayella and her other 7 siblings
  • To Kill a Mockingbird: Bob Mayella Ewell - CliffsNotes
    Ewell is a drunkard and an abuser who is despised throughout the community, and very likely by his own family But in accusing Tom Robinson, he sees what he believes is a brass ring
  • To Kill a Mockingbird: Characters | Edexcel IGCSE English Literature . . .
    In attacking Mayella Ewell and trying to kill Scout and Jem, Bob represents the harm that hatred is able to wreak: The portrayal of him living at the dump is not only a commentary on poverty and class, but also on the depravity of his attitudes
  • Robert E. Lee Ewell - Shmoop
    Bob Ewell is the current head of a family that has been "the disgrace of Maycomb for three generations" (3 93) (Sounds like quite an honor ) Considered human trash by the Maycomb community, the Ewells live in a shotgun shack out by the dump
  • The Ewells - Larsons Advisory
    There are five socio-economic levels in Lee’s novel: Upper level - this stratum is made up of “good” families Atticus’s education and their employment of Calpurnia are just two traits that demonstrate that it is to this level that the Finchs belong
  • Ewells vs Cunninghams - difbetween. com
    While both families grapple with the harsh realities of economic hardship, their responses reveal fundamental differences in character, resilience, and moral compass




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