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

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    The derogatory racial slur, n****r is written forty eight times in the highly challenged and banned novel, To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. The novel is about the life of Jean Louise “Scout” Finch, a young girl who lives during the 1930s in the small fictional town of Maycomb, Alabama. Her father, Atticus is a lawyer, who takes on a case where an African American man, Tom Robinson is taken to trial for claiming to have a raped a white woman. The trial results in asserting how powerful and…

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    To Kill A Mockingbird

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    Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird is a memorable and life-changing novel that presents important concerns relevant to today’s society. Set during the Great Depression of the 1930’s, Lee examines the issues pertaining the existence of social inequality and the coexistence of good and evil in America’s Ddeep Ssouth through the eyes of a young girl, Scout Finch. The novel remains relevant and didactic to readers’ in present time, by challenging the reader’s perceptions of race, family structure,…

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    Discrimination in To Kill A Mockingbird To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee touches on many topics which are still very relevant to this day: racism, empathy, persecution of innocents, gender roles in society, and discrimination. Discrimination is a big problem in this book; it goes so far that Scout, the narrator, faces it when she’s only around seven or eight years old. The adults face it as well. Tom Robinson, a kind black worker, is discriminated against just because he’s black. Mr. Dolphus…

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    Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird begins, Jem Finch is ten years old. Scout begins by mentioning the ending of the story for Jem who breaks his arm when he is thirteen. Although he sometimes teases and aggravates Scout, Jem becomes a good brother. He protects her, serves as one of her best friends, and in the end, saves her life. Many things impact Jem between that beginning sentence and the actual event. Jem ages from 10 to 13 over the course of To Kill a Mockingbird, a period of great…

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    The novel To Kill a Mockingbird written by Harper Lee was an instant bestseller back in 1960 and it also won the Pulitzer Prize. To Kill a Mockingbird was formulated by Harper Lee’s creativity of constructing a storyline regarding her own personal observations about society and human nature. She achieves such depth and accuracy in her publication through her character analysis, plot, dialogue, and description. Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird describes human nature through her story of the Tom…

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    Events shape us as people. In To Kill a Mockingbird Scout changes a lot as a person throughout the novel. At first she seems to not care about most things and as it goes on she sees more of the hardships in life and how life isn’t the best. At the beginning she wants to read then gets discouraged by her teacher, she sees what the sentence is for Tom Robinson, and she gets to see Boo Radley. These events change her as a person and how she acts around people. These events leave an impact on her…

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    Prejudice in “To Kill A Mockingbird” The act of prejudice is one that everyone experiences. Whether it be, a person who is distributing hate, or a person who is receiving hate, everyone has contact with it. Although it is present all over the globe, it is prominent in the United States. Both in the present and the past, endless acts of discrimination have taken place and left a monumental impact on the country. The effect that it leaves can be seen in the novel “To Kill A Mockingbird” by Harper…

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    The Importance of Values and Morals in “To Kill a Mockingbird” What you are taught in the present impacts the type of person that you will become. In “To Kill a Mockingbird”, Harper Lee shows the importance of life lessons; illustrating that the adults in the story are a big part of that journey. In “To Kill a Mockingbird”, characters in the novel influence Jem and Scout to develop into mature young adults. Atticus Finch, the father of both Scout and Jem teacher them a very important life…

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    As Diane Grim once said,” It’s better to walk alone, than to walk with a crowd going in the wrong direction.” In the book, To Kill A Mockingbird, Atticus and Scout are both very involved in their society of Maycomb, but go against some of their mainstream ideals. People can be a loyal member of a society yet oppose to the society’s standards. Not all of Maycomb, Alabama residents agreed with the town’s prevalent racism and segregation. Atticus, a white lawyer in the town of Maycomb, was…

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    This “childlike” perspective allows for the most prominent topic of the novel, racism to be explored when a mob comes to kill Tom Robison. Scout strikes up a conversation with Walter Cunningham, who is part of the lynching mob, about his son, not knowing what is actually going (pg 205). Scout doesn’t see the underlying racist intentions the men have due to her inexperience…

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