Family & Identity through To Kill a Mockingbird | The Great American Read

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PBS Learning Media
Family & Identity through To Kill a Mockingbird | The Great American Read
Harper Lee uses a non-traditional family structure to set the Finch family further apart from their neighbors in her classic American story about racism and morality. By making the family different from their neighbors, they are automatically put apart from the society in which they live. Experts weigh in on the importance of To Kill a Mockingbird today, exploring everything from what makes the book inherently "American," to why readers are drawn to tales of dysfunctional families.