Development of Scout's Character In To Kill A Mockingbird Essay

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    Scout Finch: Sins Versus Sincerity Hypocritical characters, such as Alexandra and Mrs. Gates, are exceedingly present in Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbird.” Lee also uses characters of utmost integrity to foil these hypocrites. The polarity of these themes can prove confusing and upsetting to immature youth. Therefore Scout Finch’s development of maturity was a result of her untimely comprehension of the variations between hypocrisy and integrity. Scout Finch learned an important lesson in…

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    displayed by Lee stating, “Lawyers, I suppose, were children once.” Within her novel, To Kill A Mockingbird, Harper Lee establishes the idea that children are free from the racism of American society as they maintain their innocence until their moral education begins. She weaves into the novel that the transition to adulthood in the early nineteenth century in America, especially in the South, caused the development of unethical views of African-Americans by white Americans as part of the…

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    allowed to shoot mockingbirds. A mockingbird does not harm any other creature. A mockingbird merely sing melodies that give pleasure to its listeners. As Miss Maudie states, “They don't do one thing but sing their hearts out for us.” In the book, there is a loss of innocence. The title to kill a mockingbird pertains to this loss. Innocence is symbolized by the mockingbird. To kill a mockingbird is to destroy innocence. As the story progresses, there are a series of mockingbirds which are…

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    where he stands in moments foot comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of controversy.” (Martin Luther King Jr). In the novel To Kill A Mockingbird, the author Harper Lee utilizes the character Scout Finch (Jean Louise Finch) to portray the purity and destitute of vision in the juvenile years of our lives. In part one of To Kill a Mockingbird Scout Finch is a jaunty, audacious little girl who lives in the moment. She attempts to be fearless in the most resilient situations, an…

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    visions. Whilst the techniques of symbolism, irony, and narrative perspective are employed throughout both texts, The Boy in the Striped Pajamas also relies on music and sound effects. To Kill a Mockingbird was published in 1960 and has since become a classic of modern American literature. The novel’s plot and characters are loosely inspired by Harper Lee’s observations of her family and neighbours. An event that took place within her hometown’s community in 1936 when she was approximately ten…

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    paragraph starts of her ancestors come to America was a fur trader and apothecary named Simon Finch, and he established a successful farm. It was on the Alabama river the farm was called Finch’s Landing, It supported the family for many years. Scout’s father, Atticus Finch, who was a lawyer in his nea by town Maycomb, his brother Jack Finch who went to medical school in Boston, and their sister Alexandra stayed to run the landing. There was nothing in maycomb it was a struggle. In chapters…

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    Coming Of Age Theme

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    such as Maycomb in To Kill a Mockingbird, one could be easily be brought up into a hatred fueled life. In Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, the author utilizes the theme of maturation throughout the novel to show the “coming of age” in the characters Scout and Jem as a result of the situations and experiences they are involved in. Growing up in the racially tensioned Maycomb County cause Jem and Scout to mature due to Scout’s bullying she receives at school, Jem’s development of empathy…

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    be a more mature character. He clearly puts adult notions of what is right before child ones. Towards the end of the book, Jem loses his innocence almost entirely by understanding the reality of Maycomb. He realizes that his hometown is not…

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    In To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee uses Jean Louise (Scout) Finch as the narrator. Scout is now an adult and reflects on three very crucial summers during her childhood days. When Scout is first described in the novel, she is prone to violence, labels people based on class, denigrates people, uses racist language, and is prejudice (Seidel 1). All of these things show that she is childish at the beginning of the novel. A mature character would not pick a fight or label people based on their…

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    One of the main major changes in perspective is Scout’s view on Boo Radley. Her views change drastically over the years that pass during the course of the novel. In the beginning, prior to her first year in school, Scout learns about Boo through the neighborhood gossip passed by Miss Stephanie Crawford. The stories were scary, and Scout was fearful of Boo, viewing him as monster. But when the gifts begin to appear in the secret knothole of the Radley’s oak tree, Scout realizes Boo's intentions…

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