Jem and Scout's Relationship in To Kill A Mockingbird Essay

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    is evident that prejudice greatly affects one’s beliefs and actions; accordingly justice is constantly influenced by an individual’s opinions and values, which is revealed through narrative voice and public and private worlds. In the text “To Kill a Mockingbird,” written by Harper Lee, narrative voice is utilised to explore and provide various perspectives and understanding of the private and public worlds of this novel. Throughout the novel the actions taken by an individual commonly reflect…

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    Atticus Finch Personality

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    Most people will agree that good parenting is based on love, respect, support, authority and understanding. In order to have a good relationship with your child all those ideas are a necessity. In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee portrays Atticus Finch as the perfect father and man. He is seen to show all of these characteristics to his children inside the house, and out in public. He does have a weakness though that readers seem to overlook along with his many strengths that give…

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    Harper Lee’s novel, “To Kill a Mockingbird”, is a book in which Jean Louise Finch, also referred to in the novel as Scout, points out the discrimination of the people in Maycomb towards certain social groups, based on the age, gender, social class, and most importantly, racial classification. Lee’s, book, and many other famous, classic novels build up the idea of inequality. Inequality is the unfair treatment towards certain groups of people based on their race, gender, age, and social status in…

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    Coming Of Age

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    and coming of age is when there’s a time in one’s lifetime where the person goes through a significant experience that causes them to mature, learn and develop in responsibility. In To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, we see this theme presented throughout the book, like when before Mrs. Dubose had passed away and Jem had to read to her as a punishment for ruining her camellias while she was recovering from her morphine addiction. Another example of coming of age was when Atticus Finch had went…

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    motifs in this scene are gothic details and small town life. 1) Gothic Details In literature, the term Gothic refers to a style featuring supernatural occurrences, gloomy and haunted settings, full moons, and so on. Some Gothic elements in To Kill a Mockingbird are the unnatural snowfall and the fire that destroys Miss Maudie’s house. 2) Small-Town Life The Gothic motif of the unnatural snowfall and the outbreak of a fire is counterbalanced by the old-fashioned small-town values (When the…

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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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    of people, of different ages, and presented them with a hypothetical event (Barger, Ph.D.). In the novel, To Kill A Mockingbird, Jem went through…

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    People will always be judged regardless of race, gender or any other factor and the thing that can be done to change this is changing perspective. This is shown throughout the novel, To Kill A Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, as Jem and Scout explore multiple perspectives to help them understand different people. They are forced to deal with mature topics at young ages as their father, Atticus, defends a negro man in a rape trial where he is accused by a white man. This is controversial in their…

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    on psychic forces having an influence on human behavior (Gillespie 2). He had ideas that explained the human mind and how it works. Some of the main psychological ideas focused on while reading include why characters do something, fascinations, relationships, personalities, and hidden meanings through different words and phrases. What makes this lens unique is how it improves the…

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    declarations and judge people according to them. However, this leads to unethical actions, as To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee demonstrates. The novel follows the life of six-year-old Scout Finch in Maycomb, Alabama, during the Great Depression. Scout and her brother, Jem, befriend Dill Harris, who comes to Maycomb every summer, and the trio often wonder about a reclusive neighbor, Boo Radley. Atticus Finch, Scout’s father, is a lawyer who is appointed to a case for Tom Robinson, a black man…

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