Using two novels, Brave New World by Aldous Huxley and To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, which demonstrate how mankind has abused such aspects by exploring the elements of the unknown, one can easily prove the statement above. ... The similarities of this quote from To Kill A Mockingbird links directly to the next quote, said by Bernard in the novel Brave New World. " He heard nothing, and for him, no one was coming. " (Huxley, 79). ... Both these quotes clearly explain the concept of misinterpretation, but the next quote from To Kill A Mockingbird provides further support as evidence t...
The social and historical contexts of this novel are very different from those in To Kill a Mockingbird. ... To Kill a Mockingbird is set in the 1930s America, in the Southern State of Alabama. ... To Kill a Mockingbird has a different social and historical context than Jane Eyre. ... This is similar to Scouts schooling in To Kill a Mockingbird. ...
Great literature is simply language charged with meaning to the utmost possible degree {Davidoff, 199}. American literature has been apart of our history since our settlement. Throughout our history, America has generated many great authors. These authors write works of literature that educate us, entertain us, and empower us. Two great authors that America has generated are Walt Whitman and Robert Frost. ...