A mockingbird is a symbol of innocence, purity, and goodness. Arthur ‘Boo’ Radley is portrayed as one if many mockingbirds in this novel. In ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’, Harper Lee uses symbolism, irony, and metaphor to characterize Boo Radley as misunderstood and innocent. Harper Lee metaphorically compares Boo Radley to a monster through Jem’s over exaggerated description of Boo at the beginning of the novel. Jem describes Boo as “about six-and-a-half feet tall, judging from his tracks” (page 16) and that he had a “long jagged scar that ran across his face; what teeth he had were yellow and rotten; his eyes popped, and he drooled most of the time.”…
Boo’s protective instincts and the way he act out of love to protect the children are probably one of the most important factors in To Kill a Mockingbird. The first time Boo ventures out of his house he puts a blanket around scout (p. 96), and the second time he saved the children’s lives (p. 362). Both of those times he was protecting them from something. He loved the children and love can make people do crazy things, in the case of Boo his love made him kill another man. Yes he may have already been a little insane but killing was not an act of aggression it was an act of innocence.…
People believed he was a bad man because he shot at the kids for peeking in his window, but he does not intend to do any harm, he just wants everyone to respect his privacy. To start, Boo Radley was a good guy. When Jem ripped his pants on the fence, Boo found them and stitched them back up for him. When Ms Maudie's house burnt down, he was secretly there and he gave Scout a warm blanket to keep her out of the cold. Later in the story when Scout and Jem were getting shot at, he was there.…
Furthermore, he was locked up in the courthouse basement for excessive amounts of time. In which Mr. Radley had allowed because the sheriff hadn't the heart to put him in a jail alongside Negroes. However, he was finally released and allowed back home where he would hide away for several years to come. Boo Radley was a popular gossip subject in the city of Maycomb, many kids would tell stories that weren’t all true about him. In consequence, everything they thought was dangerous or aboriginal was blamed against the man such as strange chewing gum and weird things that occurred, etc.…
1.Harper Lee has been successful in composing an engrossing novel named as, “To Kill a Mockingbird”; indeed the author incorporates many major and important characters, which play a vital role to develop an interest among the readers, but the character which I like most is the flat and static character of Mr. Radley Boo. Mr. Boo was assumed to be a terrible person but later on, he proves himself as a nice citizen. Author Lee shows Maycomb people’s feeling as they all afraid with Mr. Boo, as he never comes out from his house and has no interaction with other neighbors; so everyone spread frighten rumors about him. Radley Boo always stays at his home, which is the reason that no one from the neighborhood ever seen him. Moreover, after hearing…
Based on them, most individuals in Maycomb are influenced to act a certain way whenever the Radley name comes up. The people let these preconceptions cloud their judgment, leaving them to behave either very rudely to the victims of this prejudice, which in Boo’s case, is mockery and cruelty. This is also because it is hard for common folks to grasp on the…
In To Kill a Mockingbird Boo Radley is represented as mockingbird due to his destruction of innocence and the fact he has never tried to do anything but help people. The town of maycomb has discriminated him for so long he has stayed inside his house but when scout and jem start poking around he tries to protect them through the events of the novel. Boo Radley represents a mockingbird because he always tries to help and protect jem and scout, he never attempted to harm anyone, and due to his destruction of innocence. Though everyone is frightened by Boo, he does small favors for scout and jem throughout the novel even probably knowing about “games” the play involving him.…
“Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are.” This quote, made by John Wooden, accurately describes what parents in our society would want to tell their children from a young age; the age at which a child’s mind can still be influenced. In To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee is trying to convey that parental discipline and support in a child’s life is crucial to a child’s identity. Atticus, teaches his children: Jem and Scout, valuable character traits throughout the novel which aid them with their personality development. The most predominant traits which he establishes are courage, empathy and integrity.…
For instance, Boo Radley was a victim of the Maycomb County’s prejudice ways. When Jem says, “I’m starting to understand why Boo Radley’s stayed shut up in the house all the time… it’s because he wants to stay inside” ( Page 304). This has a much deeper meaning than what it says. When the author says this, they imply that Boo Radley hasn’t been locked up away… he’s chosen to do so. Boo Radley stayed inside to keep away from the drama and problematic situations in Maycomb.…
Right from the beginning of the story, Boo Radley is a victim of prejudice from adults and children of Maycomb. Scout and Jem hear many rumors about…
In To Kill a Mockingbird, there are many corrupt characters. Even the town itself is corrupt on its views and the way they treat each other. Throughout the story, there are numerous occasions where the people of Maycomb are shown as cruel and hypocritical. Only two people in Maycomb are of pure good, and they are Atticus and Boo Radley. Atticus chooses to see the good in people and treat everyone fairly, while Boo however just removes himself from society all together.…
Racism had made Robinson’s fate of dead inevitable. “Tom was a dead man the minute Mayella Ewell opened her mouth and screamed”. In the particular place and time, it was simply because Tom was black and Mayella was white. In the era of 1930s, the whites had overwhelming power over the blacks who were seldom protected by law. Although Atticus did a brilliant job to expose Bob Ewell and his daughter’s lies and convinced most people that Tom Robinson was closer to innocence than sin, and it took extra effort and time for the jury to make a verdict, the sentence was still guilty, due to the predominance of racist opinion at that time.…
In the book To Kill the Mockingbird, Harper Lee shows that even the innocent will be judged and prosecuted by the guilty. Arthur Radley, or better known as Boo, was the first example of amiss depiction. Boo was a complete mystery, so people started making stories and spreading rumors. Rumors that made this man sound like a freak who was controlled by a strict family. He was labeled as the violent crazy man of Maycomb.…
Boo Radley was described as a mean scary man that was locked in his house Jem describes him as "Boo was about six-and-a-half feet tall, judging from his tracks; he dined on raw squirrels and any cats he could catch, that’s why his hands were bloodstained— if you ate an animal raw, you could never wash the blood off. There was a long jagged scar that ran across his face; what teeth he had were yellow and rotten; his eyes popped, and he drooled most of the time” (16). Then Boo left gifts for Jem and Scout and that was his only way of contact with the outside world. Eventually through the book Bob Ewell attacks Jem and Scout attempting to hurt them and Boo Radley kills Bob Ewell. Atticus thought Jem killed Bob Ewell…
”(Pg.372). Boo Radley obviously is not a murderer, he is just like a 6 year old boy. He isman example of a mockingbird because of him being innocent of all the rumors about…