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ORC Resource Number #4560
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Identity, Oppression, and Protest: To Kill a Mocking Bird and the Blues
Promising Practice
PROFESSIONAL COMMENTARY

African American history during the Jim Crow era includes encounters with poverty, racism, disrespect, and protest. Harper Lee develops all four of these themes in her famous 1960 novel, To Kill a Mockingbird. To help students understand these ideas, this lesson incorporates the blues and other literature of the time. Students begin by examining how authors and artists represent the idea of manhood. Working in small groups, students analyze various texts for universal themes and research the connections between themes expressed in stories, songs, and film and the historical events of the same era. Ultimately, students will be asked to consider both African American oppression and activism through a variety of lenses. (author/ncl)

OHIO STANDARDS
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English Language Arts Standards
Reading Applications: Literary Text Standard
NATIONAL STANDARDS
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Standards for the English Language Arts
Range of materials and purposes for reading
Reading strategies, language use, and conventions
Research and inquiry
Language diversity and competency
Purposes for using spoken, written, and visual language
RESOURCE TYPE
Instructional Resource
PRACTICE LEVEL
Promising Practice
STANDARDS ALIGNMENT
Grades 10–12
TOPICS
English Language Arts --
Reading;
Comprehension;
Strategies - Literary Texts;
Literature;
American Literature;
FOUND IN
KEYWORDS
social themes;
Jim Crow;
African-American history;
Harper Lee;
To Kill a Mockingbird;
blues;
literary themes
Publisher: Public Broadcasting Service