In the novel, To Kill A Mockingbird (TKM), Scout endures numerous hardships, however, none compare to living
In the novel, To Kill A Mockingbird (TKM), Scout endures numerous hardships, however, none compare to living
To begin, the author of the story To Kill A Mockingbird expresses her theme of “coming of age” through many ways. These ways include the development of the characters, symbols used, imagery, tone and motifs. Despite the fact, that she presents numerous themes, such as racism, and social class in the South, it is the coming of age theme that is most apparent in two characters Jem and Scout. As these characters are under the control of their principled father, Jem and Scout have to encounter events that test their beliefs, faith in father’s teachings and to understand the nature of human actions/behavior.…
Jean Louise “Scout” Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee from the beginning of the novel sees the local solitary, Arthur “Boo” Radley, as a threat and insane, running past the Radley Place each day on the way from school. All her neighbors shared that Boo was a former criminal, stalker, and a threat to all Negroes, causing Scout to have the preconceived idea that Boo was a psychopath. However, in chapter 27, Scout walks by the Radley’s house from school and she expresses a different perspective on Boo, a moment that displays Scout’s transformation in character through imagery, characterization, and the story’s first person point of view. Scout begins the passage describing the Radley’s house saying, “The Radley Place ceased to terrify me, but it was no less gloomy, no less chilly under its great oaks, and no less uninviting” (Lee 242).…
“You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view...until you climb into his skin and walk around in it.” (pg.39). To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee takes the reader through a journey of prejudice and discrimination in the 1930’s. Arthur Radley or Boo Radley as some of the kids might call him, was portrayed in the novel as a very mysterious and creepy person. No one in Maycomb County really understood him and wondered why he would be locked away from the social world.…
She reflects upon the lesson when she says, “Atticus was right. That one time he said you never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them. Just standing on the Radley’s porch was enough” (Lee, 1960, p. 374). This reflection by Scout shows how she has grown from an innocent girl who had not seen much of the world outside of her small neighborhood in Maycomb, Alabama into a girl that had seen hardships around her and is able to understand that learning about one’s life before judging them is an important key to life. When Scout meets Boo Radley for the first time she finds that he is not the monster that all of the rumors had said he was, but instead he is another person with feelings just like her.…
Boo Radley is a misunderstood Mockingbird in the novel because of his absence in the town people think he is up to no good. Dill, Scout and Jem go on to make up crazy stories about him without fully understanding his situation, which leads to fear of him. In the end of the novel, they finally see him for who he really is; a powerful symbol of innocence and courage. Scout makes Boo “bend [his] arm like that” (287) to make it seem like he was escorting her down “like any gentleman would” (287). She understands now how wrong they were about him, and how he was only an innocent man accused of crimes…
Prabhdip Kang Kang 1 Mr. Shurrie 2015/11/24 ENG2D0-D To Kill A Mockingbird Everyone gets old, whether it be physically or mentally. In the book "To Kill A Mockingbird" by Harper Lee, many character show maturation. All characters show physical maturation, and mental maturation. Some characters stand out.…
Empathy is challenging to give or have when one has not taken the time to think about the different situations each person has experienced in their lifetime. In Harper Lee’s novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, she demonstrates how fully knowing a person can be difficult to do, especially when untruthful statements block the real facts about that person. Through the use of the characters Scout Finch and Dolphus Raymond, Lee portrays that empathy and understanding who someone is, is not easy to do until one puts themselves into another point of view. Harper Lee uses Scout’s thoughts to display that Scout had to actually stand on Boo Radley’s porch to see what the world seemed like in his eyes. At the beginning of the story, all Scout knew about Boo…
Is it a Bird, a Plane? No, it’s a Theme A work’s most important literary element is often regarded as it’s theme, or central message. Since many are universal, themes help hook people from all cultures and backgrounds into reading the story.…
Here, Lee further develops the social issue of discrimination in Maycomb through the continuous views towards Boo Radley. Moreover, in the beginning of the novel, Scout describes her neighborhood and the citizens of Maycomb. Scout depicts her neighbor, Boo Radley's house and the enigmas and social customs associated with Boo Radley. Specifically, Scout expounds, “Radley pecans would kill you. A baseball hit into the Radley yard was a lost ball and no questions asked” (Lee 10).…
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is a classic tale that gives an accurate depiction of southern Alabama during the early 1930s. It capitalizes on the racism and sexism that runs rampant throughout America within the time period, and retells the stories of the citizens in a sleepy, fictional town named Maycomb. Amongst them, a young tomboy named Scout recalls her life surrounding the events of the Tom Robinson case, and how she changed throughout those four years. Throughout the story of To Kill a Mockingbird, it is clear that Scout is a dynamic, round character that progressively matures from the beginning of To Kill a Mockingbird, during events such as Tom Robinson’s trial, and ends with better developed qualities at the novel’s conclusion.…
Witnessing children’s curiosities expand while developing them into an active citizen in society can be a blessing, but revealing the harsh realities of society is never easy. Harper Lee, the author of the timeless classic, To Kill a Mockingbird, depicted the story of a tomboy girl named Scout, who matured in the racist-filled city of Maycomb as she came to comprehend the society in which she lived in. Scout’s surroundings helped shape her life as she matured by observing the trial of Tom Robinson, behaviour of adult figures, and social customs. To begin, Scout spectating the trial matured her understand regarding adulthood. As Mayella was declaring her testimony, Scout observed Mayella with a sympathizing state of mind.…
Throughout To Kill a Mockingbird and Their Eyes Were Watching God, the path to maturity is very significant. Jem Finch matures throughout the To Kill a Mockingbird and it helps the audience feel emotions about the events. Janie Crawford’s path to maturity, in Their Eyes Were Watching God, is quite different than Jem’s path. Janie matured in the aspect of love, where as Jem matured in the aspect of life. Jem and Janie’s paths to maturity are very significant to both novels and helps the audience better understand events and feel emotions.…
The fact that Author Radley was actually a good person awaked Scout morally, and let she understand Atticus words. “One time he said you never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them.” The branch line of Boo Radley had been a central one that connected the whole story, and Harper Lee wrote it in a refreshing and adorable way to reveal the essence of the book’s theme. A mockingbird is a lovely songbird that does no harm but goods to people, and to kill one is completely against human conscience. However, a mockingbird’s benefit and innocence to human is much easier to grasp, than that of a person.…
Scout Finch is a young girl in To Kill A Mockingbird who lives in Maycomb, a small town in the South during the Reconstruction Era. Harper Lee uses Scout’s ignorance and vagueness as a little girl and her developing understanding about events happening her life to demonstrate a unique instance of the age old and common moral versus society dilemma. Lee’s approach to portraying this is made in an effort to show the inevitable problem in an unbiased way. As Scout grows older she becomes aware of the internal conflict in following what is ethically and morally right against the pressures of society, especially from her father Atticus as he defends Tom Robinson, a Negro against the society. As she her understanding of her father’s internal conflict…
Throughout the past 55 years To kill a Mockingbird has helped educate students about the past in America and has taught students lessons of coming age. This novel showcases the themes of racism, prejudice and injustice which were present during the 1930s. The coming of age of Jem and Scout is also presented through the situations they go through, which progressively lead them towards adulthood. The themes of the past and coming of age are important for students to learn during their youth in high school. The Kill a Mockingbird started being taught extensively in American schools during the 1970s.…