Race, Class, and Gender in To Kill a Mockingbird: Crash Course Literature 211

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 4. 07. 2024
  • In which John Green teaches you MORE about To Kill a Mockingbird. In this installment, John teaches you about race, class, and gender in the American south, as seen through the eyes of Scout and Harper Lee. John will talk about how Scout learns about these aspects of the social order as she interacts with the people of the town, learns from Calpurnia, watches the trial of Tom Robinson, and endures the attack of Bob Ewell. You'll also learn a little bit about Demi Moore and Mila Kunis, and John will ask just who is the Mockingbird, anyway? Not that he'll answer that, but he'll ask it.
    Consider supporting local bookstores by purchasing your books through our Bookshop affiliate link bookshop.org/shop/complexly​ or at your local bookseller.
    Crash Course is on Patreon! You can support us directly by signing up at / crashcourse
    Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet?
    Facebook - / youtubecrashcourse
    Twitter - / thecrashcourse
    Instagram - / thecrashcourse
    CC Kids: / crashcoursekids

Komentáře • 939

  • @yoyo2001999
    @yoyo2001999 Před 8 lety +691

    I died because I remember that Calpurnia said " If he wants to eat the table cloth you let him"

    • @banana697
      @banana697 Před 4 lety +11

      i know right! That's also what I did! lol😆

  • @domsusefulstuff
    @domsusefulstuff Před 8 lety +222

    So once upon a time we were in literature class and I tap my friend and say, "I need a phrase that describes the way Atticus' goes ahead with the trial with full enthusiasm even though he knows he's going to lose."
    Without losing a beat that smart bastard spits out, "fatalistic resignation". I haven't forgotten it in 20 years.

  • @Kitsune1414
    @Kitsune1414 Před 8 lety +698

    My favorite thing my 11th grade teacher pointed out to us was the women who were trying to 'save' those Africans, saying how uncivilized they were, how they didn't know the fathers of the children so the whole village raised them. My teacher said if the people of Maycomb raised the children together as the 'uncivilized Africans' did, the Ewell children wouldn't be dirty, covered in lice and uneducated. It wouldn't have taken Mayella weeks to gather a few nickles just to get the kids ice cream. She said every society is uncivilized in its own way and the abandoning of the Ewell children was one example of Maycomb's uncivil-ness.

  • @aviviavai
    @aviviavai Před 10 lety +154

    I'm surprised you didn't talk about the scene where Scout does become comfortable with the notion of femininity and that it is not inherently bad, only different. And that the women around her, including Calpurnia, do give her insight to what it means to be 'ladylike' without actually telling her, and she can do that when she's good and ready for it (because let's face it, she puts her overalls back on and runs around with the boys again anyway.) If you're going to talk about gender, it's a pretty important scene.

    • @wyattsutton5974
      @wyattsutton5974 Před 5 lety +12

      I know its been five years, but he talks about it in the first video about this book.

  • @fireflamefine625
    @fireflamefine625 Před 9 lety +1284

    I JUST NOW REALIZED THAT JOHN GREEN WAS THE SAME JOHN GREEN WHO IS AN AUTHOR. 😳 face palm

  • @pigcatapult
    @pigcatapult Před 10 lety +52

    Out of all the fictional men in all the books I've ever read, I think Atticus Finch is the one I admire the most. His unshakable integrity is something I wish I could live up to.

  • @GlitterIsLikeHerpes
    @GlitterIsLikeHerpes Před 10 lety +26

    In my opinion, Atticus was the mockingbird. If you research mockingbirds, you'll find that they are docile creatures until their neat is threatened. When I found that, I could only think of Atticus. If it was up to him, he wouldn't harm a fly, but if Jem and Scout are in danger, he would do whatever it takes. Take the scene with Tim Johnson for example. Atticus didn't take pride in his shooting skills because he believed he was more than just a good shooter, so he decided to hide it. However, when he fears his neighborhood may get hurt, he steps up to the plate. Over all, Atticus is just an amazingly well written character and will forever be one of my favorites.

  • @GraceMcFadden
    @GraceMcFadden Před 9 lety +542

    ugh they need to keep doing crash course literature

    • @CinnamonToast
      @CinnamonToast Před 8 lety

      +Grace McFadden I hear they are :D not sure when the new ones will be out though

    • @macncheesetv9816
      @macncheesetv9816 Před 8 lety

      They are! It's going to be more focused on Poems

    • @thebookgoddess7380
      @thebookgoddess7380 Před 8 lety +1

      +Mac'n CheeseTV I think John said in dear Hank and John that he would be doing a crash course Lord of The Files

    • @macncheesetv9816
      @macncheesetv9816 Před 8 lety

      TheBookGoddess oh cool! (btw you have the best username. You win)

    • @thebookgoddess7380
      @thebookgoddess7380 Před 8 lety

      Mac'n CheeseTV Thanks! Your username is pretty cool too : )

  • @meredithaguilar4185
    @meredithaguilar4185 Před 7 lety +433

    I'm actually watching this because I like it. Not because of studying or school. 😂😂😂

    • @artemis9137
      @artemis9137 Před 4 lety +8

      Me too. I thought that I would read the book just to enjoy it now before they make me read it next year in school and suck the life out of it.

  • @auspicious93
    @auspicious93 Před 8 lety +276

    Wait, this is the guy who wrote The Fault in Our Stars?????? Mind blown.

    • @wed777
      @wed777 Před 8 lety +20

      He also wrote: An Abundance of Katherines, Looking for Alaska, and Paper towns

    • @auspicious93
      @auspicious93 Před 8 lety +3

      +wed mofty ah, yes, Paper Towns! That movie looked good. Thanks for the info :)

    • @marys.7713
      @marys.7713 Před 8 lety +2

      +99miyah as well as having a hand in will grayson, will grayson and let it snow

    • @N3ONLUV
      @N3ONLUV Před 8 lety +13

      Imagine him doing an analysis of one of his own books (O - O)

    • @auspicious93
      @auspicious93 Před 8 lety +1

      That would be sweet!

  • @MnMPryoBanana
    @MnMPryoBanana Před 9 lety +381

    For me, the most touching scene in the movie adaptation was when the Blacks stood up when Atticus Finch left the courtroom. For me, it was not the respect that they paid that touched me but the manner in which Atticus Finch left the room. It tells me that he felt guilty and ashamed that, he could not save that innocent man's life.
    I guess it appeals to me because although humans have gone so far in issues like slavery and discrimination against race, religion, gender and sexual preferences, we still have so far to go. For instance. The killing and torture of animals for food. The destruction of their natural habitats and probably many other issues that I am still too naive to see. The guilt and shame I felt for being part of it allows me to empathize with the moment Atticus Finch left the room. The mocking bird in the title to me represents Atticus Finch. He is the man who who sings the ''truth''. To try to live his life in the right way in an unjust society but instead of being rewarded, he put his loved ones lives in danger. Since to kill his children's life is to kill him, thus the title ''to kill a mocking bird.'' Society's punishment for people who speak up for what is right in a society does wrong.

    • @excellentcollins
      @excellentcollins Před 8 lety +29

      I've never heard anybody call Atticus a mockingbird, but you made a compelling argument

    • @carmensierra3935
      @carmensierra3935 Před 8 lety +6

      I'm not sure why Atticus is a mocking bird. I see your point clearly however I'm hung up on one detail. mocking birds mock, or rather mimic. unless mockingbirds had a special or regional significance to the author, who practices mimicry through the novel?

    • @chickensauce7848
      @chickensauce7848 Před 7 lety +25

      Grant Wilson Are you alright in the head? Animals are our only source of life (besides grown food). Animals don't deserve torture. The people of India have it down, as they literally worship the cow. I understand that animals don't really have the thought process to make them humanized, but that doesn't mean we should treat them lesser than us. Because we ourselves are animals. We eat and drink to survive, we sleep, we have bodily functions and disperse of unwanted and unneeded waste. All of which animals do. Some animals even have inventions and routines, friend groups and morality, which proves higher thought. The only difference between us and animals is that we have evolved. We built a society revolving around our species, and we disregard any other species. That's what separates us. Our lack of morality to other creatures. We couldn't care less about animals going extinct, ecosystems being destroyed, and even other groups of humans dying out. We only care for ourselves, and that scares me. So... no... animals shouldn't be tortured and killed, because we should be. If our whole world up and decided to be kind and clean this world, maybe we'd finally learn what humility truly means.

    • @kediavedu
      @kediavedu Před 6 lety +4

      Chicken Sauce I completely agree w each word but it’s ironic that your name is chicken sauce... just saying...

    • @destinycoleman1132
      @destinycoleman1132 Před 5 lety +1

      @@grantwilson4506 you are crazy

  • @rane5334
    @rane5334 Před 5 lety +156

    “Scout I don’t want to cast dispersions but that’s literally the definition of communism.”
    That quote is amazing. I laughed so hard

    • @jiangciyang3860
      @jiangciyang3860 Před 4 lety

      communism? looks like ur a dire need of liberty my friend

    • @MtFDOOM48
      @MtFDOOM48 Před 4 lety

      Why tf do u have YT in ur CZcams channel name

    • @firefiames289
      @firefiames289 Před 4 lety +5

      Don’t forget, one of the earlier anti racism groups were called the communist USA, which actually helped in an racist case that inspired to kill a mockingbird.

  • @chansondelapluie
    @chansondelapluie Před 10 lety +67

    In English class we discussed how Mayella could also be seen as a mockingbird. While she does ultimately do harm, all she really wants is affection, and she is "shot" by unfortunate circumstances and her abusive father, for which there is no justification. She is a victim - not quite an innocent victim, but a victim nonetheless.

  • @dylanoryadventures4508
    @dylanoryadventures4508 Před 8 lety +807

    anyone doing last minute finals studying?

  • @witchesandwillow
    @witchesandwillow Před 10 lety +223

    I would love a Crash Course on Fahrenheit 451.

    • @Girlgirl5218
      @Girlgirl5218 Před 10 lety +13

      that book was awesome and strangely short

    • @ethankula8169
      @ethankula8169 Před 10 lety +10

      That book was so good. A bit unexplained, but good.

    • @ubiveritasetamor
      @ubiveritasetamor Před 10 lety +2

      John actually did a great vid on F451 during brotherhood 2.0; it's basically like prehistoric crash course.

    • @ChrisSeltzer
      @ChrisSeltzer Před 10 lety

      Maria McCann He only covered the first half of the book :/

    • @BenjaminAlexander
      @BenjaminAlexander Před 10 lety +2

      Chris Seltzer
      See my other comment for a link to when John covered the second half of F451. It's a video titled "Existential Airport Anxiety".

  • @elibernard905
    @elibernard905 Před 8 lety +73

    I shall use this knowledge to pass my English midterm. THANK YOU.

  • @TheJacobKing44
    @TheJacobKing44 Před 8 lety +146

    Good luck to everyone who has their English Literature Unit 1 exam tomorrow...

    • @maxlord2972
      @maxlord2972 Před 8 lety

      Thank you so much 😂

    • @TheJacobKing44
      @TheJacobKing44 Před 8 lety

      max lord Lol, what books you studying?

    • @maxlord2972
      @maxlord2972 Před 8 lety +3

      +TheJacobKing To Kill a Mockingbird, Lord of the Flies and History Boys 💸💸💸 how about you?

    • @TheJacobKing44
      @TheJacobKing44 Před 8 lety +2

      To kill a mockingbird and An inspector calls:)))

    • @Tom-uk2rf
      @Tom-uk2rf Před 8 lety

      best of luck 😢😢😢

  • @aeri7039
    @aeri7039 Před 8 lety +56

    At 10:38, John Green mentioned that it could also be Katniss Everdeen. Who laughed/smiled at this one?

    • @zyaicob
      @zyaicob Před 8 lety +2

      Me. also there is an actual book in the bookshelf this time.

  • @Pokemarky
    @Pokemarky Před 9 lety +12

    "That's what makes it endearing, but also what makes it enduring."
    After the second it took me to parse this, I smiled one of the biggest smiles I've smiled in a while.

  • @amandalovelace1698
    @amandalovelace1698 Před 10 lety +7

    This novel was a major part of my life. I remember distinctively my mother sitting on the couch next to me watching the film version. She always watches old movies so I didn't pay attention the first half hour. But when the court scene came up, I closed my computer and paid full attention on how elegantly and courageously Atticus Finch delivered his speech. I was blown away, and honestly it's what started my adventure towards classic novels. Also what started my fascination with society, and led me to my love of psychology.

  • @NosDarkly
    @NosDarkly Před 10 lety +32

    Film adaptations often don't work because movies have to follow a weirdly specific formula or audiences get bored, and shoehorning a novel into that formula can mangle it.

  • @AAAAkuuuu
    @AAAAkuuuu Před 10 lety +203

    Eat your cheetos with a tooth pick.

  • @thenameisizzi20
    @thenameisizzi20 Před 8 lety +108

    Good Luck to any GCSE English Lit students!

    • @czechmeoutbabe1997
      @czechmeoutbabe1997 Před 8 lety +1

      +thenameisizzi20 Haha thanks I'm taking it at literally 9:00 tomorrow!

    • @_AABCEHMU
      @_AABCEHMU Před 8 lety +1

      +Admiral Ackbar Same haha

    • @luvlihyunjin
      @luvlihyunjin Před 6 lety +1

      This is a year later but thank you haha 😅

  • @Kaelytraec
    @Kaelytraec Před 8 lety +90

    What if killing the mockingbird isn't literal, so much as figurative? Maybe it's not literally killing, but causing needless pain, whether for your amusement or otherwise. Take how the children treated Arthur Radley, mocking and taunting him because of their fear of him, and how close they (and Atticus) were to putting him in the limelight of the town. Maybe the sin is tormenting the man who has done nothing but try his hardest to protect them throughout the book.

    • @ameynanote
      @ameynanote Před 7 lety +7

      You seem like a person who rather than grabbing life's hand and letting it take you more like clenches it's balls hard and let's it carry you :) it's both a compliment and an nice insult.

    • @crazsomelizard6507
      @crazsomelizard6507 Před 7 lety +7

      Darby Maxwell that's exactly what it means...

    • @arthurbrennan8362
      @arthurbrennan8362 Před 7 lety +8

      There are a few "mockingbirds" in the book...those who have had their innocence destroyed by prejudice/racism. Boo, Jem, Dolphus Raymond, and Tom Robinson, of course.

    • @evrettescott8338
      @evrettescott8338 Před 7 lety

      well.... noo

    • @weiyin8046
      @weiyin8046 Před 6 lety +7

      This is literally written down in the book. I believe it’s Scout who says that Boo Radley was the mockingbird.

  • @crashcourse
    @crashcourse  Před 10 lety +135

    In which John Green teaches you MORE about To Kill a Mockingbird. In this installment, John teaches you about race, class, and gender in the American south, as seen through the eyes of Scout and Harper Lee. John will talk about how Scout learns about these aspects of the social order as she interacts with the people of the town, learns from Calpurnia, watches the trial of Tom Robinson, and endures the attack of Bob Ewell. You'll also learn a little bit about Demi Moore and Mila Kunis, and John will ask just who is the Mockingbird, anyway? Not that he'll answer that, but he'll ask it.
    Race, Class, and Gender in To Kill a Mockingbird: Crash Course Literature 211

    • @EvelynnEleonore
      @EvelynnEleonore Před 10 lety +2

      I don't understand what Johns Problem is with the movie adaptation of where the wild things are, I thought it was pretty great! :)

    • @EliseBoyd
      @EliseBoyd Před 10 lety +5

      Leo Willenbergq He was saying that there is too much in books to fit it all into a movie. WTWTA was short and they still managed to not be faithful to the book.

    • @dannyhuang8773
      @dannyhuang8773 Před 9 lety

      Woah. I thought you mentioned on MentalFloss that you can just use chopsticks. :D So there is no downside.

    • @bentoth9555
      @bentoth9555 Před 8 lety

      Why would the definition of communism being "there's one kind of folks, folks" be a bad thing in this case, though? I don't see that as a dispersion at all, personally. It's, rather, an admirable way to see people and the world.

    • @ThisIsGlobal360
      @ThisIsGlobal360 Před 7 lety

      ТТТhis mоviе is nоооow аvаааilаblе tоооо wаtсh hееrе => twitter.com/3bee47a9cb8345553/status/795842037413093376 Rасе Clаss аnd Gеndеr in То Кill аааа Mосkingbird Crash Cоursе Litеrаturе 211

  • @XLuftWaffleX
    @XLuftWaffleX Před 10 lety +385

    What does Atticus like to drink when he goes to a bar? Tequila Mockingbird.

    • @pelicane136
      @pelicane136 Před 10 lety +1

      What's the recipe?!?!

    • @doreensmileyface7625
      @doreensmileyface7625 Před 9 lety +16

      I honestly thought that the book was Tequila Mockingbird
      before I saw the book and read the title. Cause in Australia, the accent makes it sound like Tequila instead of To Kill a

    • @DaniellaTsang
      @DaniellaTsang Před 7 lety +10

      Do the kids enjoy the non-alcoholic drink known as Harper Tea?

    • @carolineroberts9644
      @carolineroberts9644 Před 6 lety +6

      Lol. Not to be the person, but Atticus doesn’t drink. Bob Ewell does though. :)

    • @mv1suales
      @mv1suales Před 6 lety

      good one

  • @GlovesoffHarry
    @GlovesoffHarry Před 10 lety +10

    This is the the winter of our discontent. Made glorious summer by this sun of Green.

  • @Scheurthiaume
    @Scheurthiaume Před 10 lety +7

    John I cannot thank you enough for this... Our English teacher assigned this book and a project about the themes and stuff and refuses to discuss it with us... You rock and totally are saving my grade!! Thanks so much!
    (I read the book, you just helped me understand the deeper themes and such).

  • @CourtoonXIII
    @CourtoonXIII Před 10 lety +32

    Perfect use of Bran.

    • @dylan-fr3bh
      @dylan-fr3bh Před 5 lety

      I thought this was a game of thrones comment

  • @tessat338
    @tessat338 Před 10 lety +3

    Finally! Someone is talking about Calpurnia. I don't think that one can have an adequate discussion of "To Kill a Mockingbird" without bringing in Calpurnia. She is the mother figure to Atticus' father figure and we can't understand where Scout is coming from with out seeing Calpurnia's influence over her and Jem.

  • @jennychen8601
    @jennychen8601 Před 8 lety +36

    "Could also be Katniss Everdeen." XD

  • @MurderOfSuburbia
    @MurderOfSuburbia Před 10 lety +17

    I totally agree! To Kill a Mockingbird's adaptation was the best movie-film I've seen :) I am seriously considering naming my son Atticus

  • @luvkirby4ever
    @luvkirby4ever Před 7 lety +10

    I find the ending of this really beautiful... but that makes me really wonder about John's opinion on Go Set a Watchman. I have many conflicting emotions about it.

  • @johnreyes2461
    @johnreyes2461 Před 8 lety +8

    Read this in the 8th grade but my teacher never when this deep into the book. I like this view of the book

  • @aliciakonstantina3623
    @aliciakonstantina3623 Před 8 lety +4

    I read To Kill a Mockingbird in 8th grade, and I completely overlooked everything about it. I don't know, it's not that I didn't like it, but I didn't really understand the plot, or I didn't appreciate it at the time, because I had to read it for my English class (I didn't read it for pleasure.) But now, 2 years later, watching this video gives me new insights. I think I might read it again. Thanks Crash Course!!

  • @parkerneu9964
    @parkerneu9964 Před 5 lety +1

    I'm cramming a bunch of these in the night before my AP Literature exam as a review for the FRQ's, thank you guys for making these.

  • @Cloverlord444
    @Cloverlord444 Před 10 lety +10

    OMG, Google installed an option to further speed up videos to at least 2X normal speed.
    Crash Course has turned into Super Crash Course for those brave enough to tread those waters.

    • @athelynstark4381
      @athelynstark4381 Před 10 lety

      OH MY GOD did you by chance check it out Slowed down!? Drunk Literature.

    • @graceperemot5374
      @graceperemot5374 Před 10 lety

      how can i do that?

    • @Cloverlord444
      @Cloverlord444 Před 10 lety

      Grace-Christine Peremot options (little gear on bottom of video) then go up to speed options and select whatever you want.

  • @moonshowerNo1
    @moonshowerNo1 Před 8 lety +9

    Mr Green Mr Green! Please do a crash course on The Crucible and Animal Farm! It would help me lots with the prescribed books at school

  • @SOCKER719
    @SOCKER719 Před 10 lety +2

    In 11 minutes you have explained this book to me so well that I'm actually interested in rereading this book after my freshman English teacher spent a good 10 days worth of classes killing this book and taking out any imaginative thoughts I might've had about it.

  • @MeVsThevoices
    @MeVsThevoices Před 10 lety +1

    really been enjoying this series, thank you everyone at Crash Course

  • @zeztro
    @zeztro Před 10 lety +15

    I could have used this a week ago when I did my English exam partly on To Kill a Mockingbird...

    • @blazakin246
      @blazakin246 Před 10 lety

      Robert Barlow Thats exactly what happened a couple weeks ago, but now we're watching the movie.

    • @Crystalvampire66
      @Crystalvampire66 Před 10 lety

      Robert Barlow I got it in Grade 10. But it is my dad's favourite book so he tried to get me to read it when I was 11. It didn't work out for him.

    • @Crystalvampire66
      @Crystalvampire66 Před 10 lety

      Robert Barlow I love reading, and I did when I was a kid too. And Mocking Bird was at my level, but 11 year old me could not get into it. I could understand the words but the subject matter was a little beyond me.

  • @Eliajayoub
    @Eliajayoub Před 10 lety +21

    My girlfriend wants you to know that the cartoon me in the end looks better than I do (joke). I love you too Crash Course.

  • @annabay5734
    @annabay5734 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Probably the best analysis of this book
    I’ve ever heard

  • @chloeb.7999
    @chloeb.7999 Před 10 lety

    I read this book already, but thank you so much for doing it. When I read this book in English class it helped me understand other people, the influences of them and the lives they lead. And when you talk about these stories so passionately, it renews that spirit of reading. These videos should seriously get more views

  • @ThatSoddingGamer
    @ThatSoddingGamer Před 10 lety +16

    The wrong captions were uploaded (I think from a previous episode?) >_> Fortunately John (and Hank) Green are among those that I can easily understand without captions. Just wanted to point it out.

    • @Maramaritaguinaga
      @Maramaritaguinaga Před 10 lety +3

      Well, I can´t hear quite right. And english is not my first language :( so I feel I missed a bit of what was said. Please try to fix it, some of us need captions.

  • @salpednavsalocin
    @salpednavsalocin Před 10 lety +14

    Remedy for cheeto-fingers: eat with chopsticks!
    you're welcome, Jhon's books ;)

  • @marys.7713
    @marys.7713 Před 8 lety +2

    this is so especially helpful for incoming freshman who can benefit from someone explaining the themes of the story that require background. i have to write reports on different areas in this novel and i found it quite inspiring to watch this and the other tkam video to find discussion topics to write about. when you explained different things about the novel and talked about them, it got my own ideas and opinions flowing and i was able to write down what i thought about the things you were talking about. for that i'd like to thank you. creative/writing inspiration is the greatest gift that i could receive from anyone or anything.

    • @Codiliabra
      @Codiliabra Před 7 lety +1

      I'm just listening for fun, but, I will be a freshman next year, this could be useful.
      Also, do not throw away your shot.

  • @cejo4636
    @cejo4636 Před 9 lety

    This got me an A on an essay! (Which is a miracle in regards to my previous English marks)
    It was so insightful, concise and easy to take in.
    Thanks so so so so soooo much crash course!
    I wish I could give everyone who works there a kiss on the cheek!

  • @LachyBalboa1
    @LachyBalboa1 Před 10 lety +5

    "Shoot all the bluejays you want, if you can hit em. But remember it's a sin to kill a mockingbird."

  • @DanThePropMan
    @DanThePropMan Před 10 lety +23

    MILA KUNIS IS NOT OLD, YOU TAKE THAT BACK

  • @davescave7267
    @davescave7267 Před 10 lety

    I just felt like i needed to point out the closed captioning is incorrect. Looks like it is the one from the first part of To Kill a Mockingbird. Excellent show and i really enjoyed all of the points made. Thank you John and the rest of you hard working souls.

  • @franzineumeister7379
    @franzineumeister7379 Před 10 lety +2

    Wow, at 0:14 and 0:21 there's Bran!
    Awesome idea!
    I truly can't stop smiling^^
    Please continue your great work, y'all! :)

  • @Soligmon
    @Soligmon Před 10 lety +8

    I only just realised that you went through your entire Jane Eyre video without mentioning that there's a character called John Green!!!!!

  • @CrystalWilliamsoncoach
    @CrystalWilliamsoncoach Před 10 lety +3

    WEB duBois' book THE SOULS OF BLACK FOLK is one of my favorites of all time!

  • @sumahidchowdhury8465
    @sumahidchowdhury8465 Před 10 lety +1

    Great video, guys! We just finished reading To Kill A Mockingbird in class. Great book.

  • @stephthebard9037
    @stephthebard9037 Před 10 lety

    This is one of the few books I remember clearly from my middle school years and I NEVER thought of it this deeply before. Now I must reread this book with a whole new perspective.

  • @Abbyc983
    @Abbyc983 Před 10 lety +4

    I love the game if thrones reference in the beginning

  • @KOOLBOYSC1
    @KOOLBOYSC1 Před 10 lety +17

    wow my eight grade class just finish reading this book

    • @mostkilz
      @mostkilz Před 10 lety +6

      Now that I look back at my 8th grade, I kinda wish that I appreciated the book more. Enjoy ur 8th grade reading

    • @mostkilz
      @mostkilz Před 10 lety +3

      im too old for yall D:
      its good tho, so enjoy it :)

    • @timjohnson7588
      @timjohnson7588 Před 7 lety

      I know this was three years ago, but give it a read now. I haven't read it since freshman year, and I'm halfway through college. The amount of stuff I pick up now is significantly higher than before. Best wishes to you mate.

  • @Ikelae
    @Ikelae Před 10 lety +1

    Thanks thought bubble for putting that slight 101st airborne reference in for the Little Rock 9!

  • @reid975
    @reid975 Před 10 lety +1

    TKAM is one of my favorite books; thank you John Green for doing it justice!!!

  • @jamesgreen6251
    @jamesgreen6251 Před 10 lety +7

    I never thought that any one person in the book was 'the mockingbird' rather it is about the act itself. To kill a mockingbird is an act of spite that harms many people and profits no one and I think there are several in the book. Its that bewildered felling of why would anyone do such a thing. Compared say to Atticus shooting the dog which is also sad but necessary.

  • @jmcosmos
    @jmcosmos Před 10 lety +5

    If you (and Harper Lee) think that mockingbirds don't eat crops, then you've never had a garden full of tomatoes that you had to screen the buggers off from.

  • @summergutierrex5535
    @summergutierrex5535 Před 5 lety

    Thank you for making this video! This and part one was really helpful for me to review the book after reading it.

  • @jsarge426
    @jsarge426 Před 4 lety +2

    watching this for english assignment lets go!

  • @bishfish7726
    @bishfish7726 Před 9 lety +4

    it has to be bran in the quote thingy

  • @jazzyjake6503
    @jazzyjake6503 Před 9 lety +3

    John Green for president!

  • @Numbuh1NerdX
    @Numbuh1NerdX Před 10 lety

    These two videos are probably going to keep me from failing my English class, so thank you, CrashCourse!

  • @nadiact-ie5hy
    @nadiact-ie5hy Před 10 lety +2

    Thank you so much for this video on Mockingbird, and for all of your videos. I've loved this book since High School, and I love being able to think about it in new ways. DFTBA

  • @featuringfranklin
    @featuringfranklin Před 10 lety +11

    Kurt's next! Yay!

    • @billyshears8644
      @billyshears8644 Před 10 lety

      Yeah but I haven't read Slaughterhouse Five yet and I think I want to...
      So then I can't watch the episode.
      Darn.

    • @pantsrevolutions
      @pantsrevolutions Před 10 lety +1

      Billy Shears It's a quick read, so get to it! :D

    • @billyshears8644
      @billyshears8644 Před 10 lety +1

      Thanks for the advice! If I have time between studying for AP exams, I will! ;)

    • @pantsrevolutions
      @pantsrevolutions Před 10 lety

      ***** The serenity prayer? Probably my favorite "quote" of all time.

  • @stellarfirefly
    @stellarfirefly Před 10 lety +5

    Speaking of good vs bad movie adaptations of literature: John, what did you think of the 2013 version of "The Great Gatsby" with DiCaprio and Maguire?

    • @danheidel
      @danheidel Před 10 lety +14

      If I recall, it was something like, "Ehhhhhhh..."

    • @Forceprincess
      @Forceprincess Před 10 lety +2

      It was so, overly faithful that I felt like I was reviewing for an exam.Which is rare for a book movie. I liked it well enough, but was bothered by the hip-hop at Gatsby's party.

    • @richielomas9564
      @richielomas9564 Před 10 lety +5

      Shauna Force See, I think the point of that was to better convey the sense of wildness and debauchery of the party. Modern audiences consider jazz and old-person's music, and so would likely think of it as conservative, traditional, and restrained. Obviously that's not the case to anyone who knows jazz, but the spirit of the party and the age is best conveyed my music which the audience will associate with reckless abandon and defiance of strict morality.

    • @Forceprincess
      @Forceprincess Před 10 lety

      Richie Lomas I understand that, and I agree with you, but the anachronism still took me out of the movie a bit.

    • @stellarfirefly
      @stellarfirefly Před 10 lety +2

      The same applied for me. I understand the reasoning behind it, but for me it was just distracting because it didn't fit.

  • @makaylakinsella7646
    @makaylakinsella7646 Před 10 lety

    You gave me the reference I needed for my English paper with DuBois! Crash Course rocks so much!

  • @ColeMootz
    @ColeMootz Před 10 lety +1

    This is one of my favorite books of all time; Thanks a ton for making two vids on it Mr. Green! (Since i guess your a teacher)

  • @SereniaSaissa
    @SereniaSaissa Před 9 lety +3

    the captions are from part 1 - which is confusing as this is part 2!!!

  • @samseidel9917
    @samseidel9917 Před 8 lety +5

    Every time he says folKs a little part of me dies... 2:55

  • @kathywithak7529
    @kathywithak7529 Před 2 lety

    What a gem this channel is!!!
    Thank you 😊

  • @chrisundercoffer8124
    @chrisundercoffer8124 Před 10 lety +1

    I just found out you wrote The Fault In Our Stars. My mind is blown. I watch you in social studies class all of the time.

  • @mireiaparetsperis3078
    @mireiaparetsperis3078 Před 9 lety +5

    The subtitols in this episode aren't correct. Congratulations for your channel is really interesting and I learn a lot of new things.

    • @PeterDSMork
      @PeterDSMork Před 9 lety +1

      Mireia parets peris Agreed. Please fix the captions!

  • @dontwatchtheworldburn3673
    @dontwatchtheworldburn3673 Před 10 lety +4

    Books are great, but when I read a book written in first person, for the next few hours, I believe I am the narrator of the book, I kid you not.

  • @paperl9328
    @paperl9328 Před 5 lety

    I think you show admirable, true courage in trying to be "hip", John Green.

  • @michaeluranga277
    @michaeluranga277 Před 10 lety

    one of my favorite books! thanks John!

  • @gogothewind123
    @gogothewind123 Před 10 lety +5

    Y'know, I was almost moved there at the end. Then there was a Hunger Games reference.

  • @squigoo
    @squigoo Před 8 lety +3

    0:38 not if you eat them with chopsticks! :3

  • @beberoo
    @beberoo Před 10 lety

    Your conclusion made me teary-eyed, John :')

  • @tomtoddmusic
    @tomtoddmusic Před 10 lety

    Wow, I got misty-eyed at the end! Good explanation.

  • @FeeOJLee
    @FeeOJLee Před 9 lety +12

    Isn't this how everyone lives their lives? I mean with a double identity? I'm Nigerian American and I know how I should act with Africans, how I should act with blacks and how to act with whites. I kinda just thought that's how it is. Humans are mirror animals and have schemas that categorize things so if they categorize a thing in a certain way they will mirror that thing. I've always just thought that's what it was.
    I'm not saying that that is good because it sucks having that many identities because like Selena's father says in the movie Selena "We have to be more Mexican than the Mexicans and more American than the Americans, both at the same time! It's exhausting!"

    • @paulkannenberg1223
      @paulkannenberg1223 Před 9 lety +6

      Most do, but scout and jem were raised by atticus. Ms. Maudie said that Atticus acted the same in public as he did in his home, so jem and scout expected everyone else to do that.

    • @StephySon
      @StephySon Před 8 lety

      +Jesuferanmi Jebutu I know what you mean, I feel like I have to put on masks everyday, masks with my family, masks with my friends, masks around my white friends, masks around my black friends, on and on and on . . .

  • @Eleglas
    @Eleglas Před 10 lety +3

    Shout-out to Bran Stark warging.

  • @brkatimachor
    @brkatimachor Před 10 lety

    Thanks John!!! Thanks Crash Course crew!!

  • @rm177545
    @rm177545 Před 10 lety

    I read To kill a mocking bird after my teacher recommended it to me in the sixth grade. She wanted me to be in her higher level language arts class but my school wouldn't let me until the next year so she told me to read it as a way to help me not be behind.
    It is still one of the most interesting books I have ever read. I've read it more than once and I always find it as riveting as the first time I read it.

  • @aperson22222
    @aperson22222 Před 10 lety +9

    Mila Kunis is old? She's only thirty. Not only that, I'd never even heard of her till a couple years ago. On the other hand, she _was_ born in a country which no longer exists.

    • @Crystalvampire66
      @Crystalvampire66 Před 10 lety

      What country is that? I assumed she was American, of course unless I know other wise I assume every actor in an American movie is American.

    • @aperson22222
      @aperson22222 Před 10 lety

      Crystalvampire66
      USSR

    • @leafsfan112233
      @leafsfan112233 Před 10 lety

      aperson22222 wait she's Russian? damn I didn't know that, wait nvm says here she's Ukrainian (she was born where Ukraine is today), she doesn't look like someone I'd imagine is from that part of the world though

    • @Crystalvampire66
      @Crystalvampire66 Před 10 lety

      aperson22222 Well I guess that technically doesn't exist, but all the countries that made it up exist, I think. Like the Ukraine exists. Oh and to leafsfan112233 every country has hot people, just based on the numbers alone every country has to have some hot people. But some countries might have less than others

    • @leafsfan112233
      @leafsfan112233 Před 10 lety

      Crystalvampire66 no I was talking about her skin color more than anything, people I imagine from that area I think of as more white, she may have some Mongolian or steppe in her by the looks of it, I know there are plenty of hot woman in every country lol

  • @larryf2821
    @larryf2821 Před 10 lety +3

    You say that literature lets us see through other people's eyes, but as I see it, it lets us see through the eyes of one person, the author. You are taking a journey through one person's head and this is my critique of fiction and why most of my reading is non-fiction.

    • @john-alanpascoe5848
      @john-alanpascoe5848 Před 10 lety +2

      Well, we are not confined to reading the works of only one author, nor is the author confined to writing only one book, or to only letting us see the viewpoint of only one character. Yes, an author's personal viewpoint(s) will colour their work, but that means that as soon as that viewpoint differs from our own, we are already being confronted with a different viewpoint. We are also free to think about and question how an author portrays their characters.

    • @Gemmabeta
      @Gemmabeta Před 10 lety +1

      Reading is also about interpretation, so it allows you to take a walk through the author's head, the heads of the people the author is writing about, and your own head as you formulate your own opinions on the action (and possibly see those opinions change).

    • @A3roboy
      @A3roboy Před 10 lety

      I agree. For the purposes of empathizing with real people fiction is simply too unrealistic, both the plots and the characters. If you want to find out what it's like being in 1950s Alabama, read an autobiography (or better yet a newspaper, but that's not the point).

    • @archvermin
      @archvermin Před 10 lety +7

      You maybe surprised at how a single person's dramatised writings can provide insight into the minds of multiple people.
      Consider this: your short entry of mere 2 sentences on the internet have already (within 24hrs) invited the approval of A3roboy, who mirrored your view.
      Now it may very well just stop there, and your comment will fade into the ocean of digital information. On the other hand, if many many people agree enough with you, they may leave their own supporting comments and like your post. Eventually yours will become a top comment, always afloat on the digital sea; and your readers will through your eyes catch a glimpse of shared insight of many more others like you. And no one really knows whether a Larry F who wears glasses and handsome facial hair really exist.
      Just as how John previously illustrated his video on Things Fall Apart, of how Chinua Achebe was able to fictionalise into a novel the collective experiences of a generation of Africans, and this novel is now remembered and celebrated because a single person's writing can resonate with many more people so well.

    • @benvolio6108
      @benvolio6108 Před 10 lety

      "I don't like imaginary things because they come from one person."
      "I read non-fiction even though it still is usually written by one person."
      Right.

  • @iAteYourCookiesxD
    @iAteYourCookiesxD Před 8 lety +3

    I like those literature crashcourse (i dn't need them for school btw) I like to get to know more about symbols and Backgrounds and stuff. I'd like to see a Literature crashcourse of Lord of the Flis, because we never read that in school but I read it private and i liked it really much.

  • @magaliinwonderland8417

    Thanks for this great video! More crash course literature vids would be amazing, you make things so gripping! Next? Madame Bovary? David Copperfield? :)

  • @taliafore1578
    @taliafore1578 Před 8 lety +3

    Dont ask me why, but when I was little I used to think Rosa Parks was Hilary Clinton.

  • @tkkt.6480
    @tkkt.6480 Před 7 lety +4

    but wait...the mongols!!

  • @bitanezam1071
    @bitanezam1071 Před 5 lety

    Awesome review, John Green. I didn't expect any less. :)

  • @VideoNozoki
    @VideoNozoki Před 10 lety

    John, GREAT discussion of the issues and virtues of To Kill A Mocking Bird.
    Thank you.

  • @Alverant
    @Alverant Před 10 lety +4

    A bad modern movie version: Amazing Spider-man 2.

    • @Alverant
      @Alverant Před 10 lety +1

      Haven LouGarou I disagree. SM3 didn't take one of Spider-man's greatest (arguably) failures/lessons and totally suck all the meaning out of it by a guy who looks like Edward Cullen.

    • @lolallday08
      @lolallday08 Před 10 lety +1

      Haven LouGarou you make a very valid point there...

    • @lolallday08
      @lolallday08 Před 10 lety +1

      Haven:2 Alverant:1

    • @yogaadampratama4201
      @yogaadampratama4201 Před 10 lety +2

      ***** "by a guy who looks like Edward Cullen."
      YOU TAKE THAT BACK.

    • @Alverant
      @Alverant Před 10 lety

      Haven LouGarou That first part sounds more like ASM 2. I don't know who KD Lang is, but the Parker in the SM movies looks more like what Parker should be than the Edward Cullen wannabe the found for the current trilogy+.

  • @thomaswillard6267
    @thomaswillard6267 Před 8 lety +4

    Man, the sequel to To Kill a Mockingbird really cut down his analysis of Atticus

    • @coreylando6608
      @coreylando6608 Před 8 lety +2

      +Thomas Willard Just pretend the sequel doesn't exist. It just tarnishes the original.

    • @juliaserra1406
      @juliaserra1406 Před 8 lety +2

      +Corey Lando Go set a Watchmen was actually the original. To Kill a Mockingbird was written according to the editors suggestions. The new book definitely tarnishes Atticus' progressive image, but it does this by bringing light to his character, and that's not necessarily a bad thing. Atticus Finch, even in TKM, despite his recognition of the humanity in POC, still asserts white superiority. Go set a Watchman should not be ignored simply because it sheds a dark light on something that has been so deeply revered, it provides an important context that allows us to be more conscious of what readers consider is "progressive."

    • @marys.7713
      @marys.7713 Před 8 lety +1

      +Julia Serra i think also it is important to remember although characters and settings and obviously similar or identical in the two books, they're really not the same story. different versions possibly. but i don't believe that they were meant to exist in the same fictional universe

  • @dance4life812
    @dance4life812 Před 10 lety

    Hey john!!! So i absolutely love crash course! You and hank are so helpful! Do you think you could possibly make an Invisible Man crash course video? I had a hard time understanding everything in the book (alot happens) and would love to have you pick it apart and explain it to us! Thanks!

  • @TheAvengedSoldier369
    @TheAvengedSoldier369 Před 10 lety

    I loved To Kill a Mockingbird so much. I'm so sad that I had to finish reading it. I fell in love with all the characters and I fell in love with the story as a whole. One of my favorite books by far.