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

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    The novel To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee has several life learning lessons taught by one another. Atticus Finch, the father, is a lawyer and provides words of wisdoms to his children Jeremy “Jem” and Jean Louise “Scout”. Primarily, Atticus teaches them about acceptances. In the eye of the neighbors and community, Atticus is a role model. Education runs throughout the whole book, but it 's not always taught in school. This is shown when Atticus explains that the world is much larger than…

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    Dr. Martin Luther King’s quote “All people shall live free” was a turn in the Civil Rights movement, expressing how all people should be treated regardless of race, economic status or gender. Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird (1960) holds many messages in regards to the equality among all people. Throughout the novel, as the children grow up, America is also growing. The country is maturing and learning what exactly it means to be equal. The events that the children experience in Maycomb county…

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    "To Kill a Mockingbird" is aimed at challenging prejudice and discrimination that took place during the 1930s. The characterisation of Mrs. Dubose provides development for central themes of prejudice and morality. The story relies on the importance of Mrs. Dubose’s character by exploiting a range of techniques such as emotive language, punctuation, metaphor, simile and personification. She was created by Harper Lee to contribute to the microcosm of American Society and criticise the…

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    English. He also acted in a “stupid” manner, as to show that blacks were not smart. He toured both England and the United States, performing this act which made him the most popular white entertainer of his time. “Jim Crow” became a common stage character among white comedians, and was very well known by all whites during that time period. Rice was known as the “Father of Minstrelsy”. It is unclear how, but when the laws against blacks were passed, the famous name Jim Crow became the nickname…

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    The novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, tells the story about Scout, Atticus, Dill, and Jem, children growing up in the 1930’s during the Great Depression in Maycomb, Alabama. The story is about a young girl who is exposed to racism, loss of innocence, and gender roles. Along the way this 8 year old girl named Scout tells what is happening in Maycomb. It is told in her perspective and told in a way that is mature yet childish because she doesn't fully understand what is happening. This…

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    To Kill a Mockingbird explores the moral nature of human beings in a time before the civil rights movement. The story begins from the perspective of childhood innocence, where it is assumed that people are good since they have never seen evil, but it later shifts…

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    states many allusions. From Superman and Josef Stalin, to Mohammad Ali, Mark Twain and Harper Lee. Interestingly, the reference to Harper Lee is quite fitting to the story considering The Monthly considers this book to be "an Australian 'To Kill a Mockingbird '". Together, these techniques complement each other and help the author express the taboo central idea 's that have been revealed within the text so far. These include the notion of racial discrimination, particularly 'half-casts ' and…

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    “We decided that it would be best for you to have some feminine influence” declares Aunt Alexandra in a munificent manner (170). To Kill a Mockingbird, written by Harper Lee, discusses the roots of human behavior through the lives of Scout Finch and her racially divided, Southern-knit community during the early 1930s. Due to Scout lacking a mother-like figure in her adolescent years and spending meager time with her father because of the erroneous trial of Tom Robinson, Aunt Alexandra comes to…

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    The changing and growth of children throughout their life is an inevitable thing that will happen. Scout Finch from the novel To Kill a Mockingbird is not only a child subjected to the age of racism and Jim Crow Laws, but narrated the horrible events that go on throughout. The time that they lived in after the abolishment of slavery subjects them to extreme bias on the way they viewed blacks and other races either for the better or worse. Some ideas and examples and good evidence for the cause…

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    “You never understand a person until you consider things from his point of view… until you climb into his skin and walk around in it” (Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird). This story takes place in Maycomb, Alabama in 1960’s where segregation is happening. In around the 1930’s people of color didn’t have the same rights as white people. White people assumed that all people of color lie, disrespectful etc. Jem is the oldest child, Scout in the youngest and the narrator of this book. In the…

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