Heba lokonoi
Mrs. Richardson
ENG2DI-01
Scout Recognizing Empathy To Kill a Mockingbird is a timeless, southern gothic novel written by Harper Lee. In 1960, Harper Lee decides to write To Kill a Mockingbird in response to the issues that surround racial discrimination, and the civil rights movement. The narrative follows a middle-class family, in Maycomb Alabama, during the height of the Great Depression. The Finch family includes a young girl, named Scout, Jem, Atticus, Aunt Alexandra, and their maid/caretaker, Calpurnia. Scout and Jem spend their childhood days fantasizing about a man named Boo Radley, who they see as intimidating and dangerous, like a monster hiding under a childs bed. As time and their interests move on, they soon
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When Boo finds and saves Scout and Jem from Bob Ewell trying to kill them, Atticus invites Boo onto the porch to talk: “I led him to the chair farthest from Atticus and Mr. Tate. It was in deep shadow. Boo would feel more comfortable in the dark” (364). Scout jumps into the skin of Boo Radley and offers him a seat in the shade, understanding he would be far more comfortable there. Further along in the novel, Scout get quite custom to Boo’s actions and feelings, and knows he will not ask for things he secretly wants: “He turned to me and nodded towards the front door. ‘You’d like to say goodnight to Jem, wouldn't you[?] [...] Boo’s hand came up, but he let it drop to his side. ‘You can pet him, Mr. Arthur, he's asleep’” (372). Scout looks at things in Boo’s perspective and offers him things she knows he is too shy to ask for. Just after saying goodnight to Jem, Scout walks Mr. Arthur home. On his porch steps, she thinks to herself: “Atticus was right. [...] 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 porch was enough” (374). Scout is able to see and empathize for the real Boo Radley. She no longer sees the man who stabs his father or looks at people sleeping during the night. She sees a shy hero. She is now able to climb into his skin and understand his perspective and …show more content…
With the help of her friends, family, and many others in Maycomb county, Scout is able to understand how to show empathy and compassion. Scout starts as a young, naive little girl who is uneducated on many topics, including empathy, to a young lady who understands a lot more about her town, and how to treat the people of Maycomb. Watching the experiences and challenges Scout faces, the readers of To Kill a Mockingbird are able to grow and learn along side Scout. The readers can also understand how to climb into the skin of others and hopefully put these lessons into action. To Kill a Mockingbird is referred to as a ‘timeless classic’ because the lessons and meaning of the novel never grow old. Everyone will always need to follow the rules of empathy, equality, love for others, and kindness, which are just some of the actions and feeling the novel
Empathy Empathy is shown in To Kill A Mockingbird by Atticus standing up for Tom Robinson, Jem realizing that Arthur Radley is not crazy; he is just antisocial, and Scout feeling remorse for tormenting Arthur throughout her childhood. Atticus shows empathy throughout the whole book, from promising Scout that they will read every night, to taking on Tom Robinson’s trial, it’s hard to find a more genuine character. While Atticus knew that the trial may not end well, he still believed he should stand up for what is right, regardless of anyone’s skin color. Atticus was willing to fight a large group of burly men to protect Tom Robinson, it could be that he thought about what he would want others to do if he were in that situation.
To Kill a Mockingbird, People’s ability to understand empathy determines their quality of life. Once people begin to empathize for others, their quality of life can be impacted positively. Scout was raised by a father who always understood and gave compassion to other people. Atticus, her father, taught his daughter many lessons on empathizing for others. Scout can trust her father as he is a man with good morals.
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 porch was enough.” Scout was finally able to understand Boo Radley unlike the town folk who judged him wrongly. She knew that the reason why Boo Radley stayed inside all of those years is because he didn’t want to be part of a cruel and hateful
Scout later reflects on her treatment of Boo remembering Atticus’s advice which was that “you never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them.” and Scout thinks that “Just standing on the Radley porch was enough.” showing that she was able to see his point of view and change her own opinions. When Boo asks Scout to lead him home, he does so “in the voice of a child afraid of the dark.” which contrasts with the children’s fear of him at the beginning of the novel, using a metaphor to indicate his shyness. This helps Scout
"Were you ever a turtle, huh?” asked Charles Baker Harris, opposing Jem’s displeasing similie (Lee 14). While the novel’s themes of empathy were not confined to river animals, Dill’s compassion introduced the importance of individual angles to Scout Finch’s narrative. Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird stands as a metaphor for the importance of childhood, innocence, and most importantly, empathy. The book’s protagonists, Scout and Jem, experienced prejudice firsthand in a conservative town of the 1930s, learning to consider new perspectives as they matured.
Harper Lee paints a clear picture of what Scout’s street looks like from Boo Radley’s porch, “I had never seen our neighborhood from this angle” (pg.373). This expresses that the way Scout sees the world is evolving, with this evolution Scout learns that viewing the world through the eyes of someone else can lead to one better understanding the world for themselves. “Atticus was right. 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 porch was enough.”
Another well known lesson taught by Atticus is about empathy. Empathy is defined as: the ability to understand and share the feelings of another. This is shown in chapter three when Scout encountered some problems with her new, first grade teacher, Mrs. Caroline. The little girl was mature well beyond her years, therefore, when she was asked to read out loud, Scout read with near perfect fluency. However, the teacher was surprisingly displeased with her advanced level in literature and flow, and assuming it was Atticus who was educating his daughter, Mrs. Caroline wanted the ‘lessons’ to come to a stop.
Empathy is the ability to understand and share the feelings of another. To me the word empathy in “To Kill A Mockingbird” means “putting yourself in someone else’s shoes.” Harper Lee’s novel “To Kill A Mockingbird” suggests that empathy is a universal feeling, but everyone experiences it in different occasions and in different ways. Many people empathize through real life experiences. Scout is one of those people.
When reading To Kill a Mockingbird a fiction novel by Harper Lee,there are atrocities that will cause the reader to empathy for the people,because the people are misunderstood and disliked , this going for almost every character in the book in their own ways To have empathy is to understand what somebody is going through, being able to understand because you probably have been through the same or similar things. I think that a man more so a child should never go throw some of the things that Tom Robinson and Walter Cunningham go through , there misunderstood by everyone,mistreated by the other folks, both live and are victims of poverty . Tom Robinson and I are both misunderstood , hurt and victims of poverty making him one of
Scout’s growth can also be seen after she walks Arthur home. She stops for a second and thinks: “Boo was our neighbor. He gave us two soap dolls, a broken watch and chain, a pair of good-luck pennies, and our lives. But neighbors give in return. We never put back into the tree what we took out of it: we had given him nothing, and it made me sad” (Lee 373).
Everyone goes through life growing up and maturing. Even though Lee also emphasizes the effects of growing up leading to the loss of innocence and purity of one. In Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird, Lee implies that growing up can lead to loss of innocence, especially in troubling times.
Scout was taking Boo out to the porch “I led him to the chair farthest from Atticus and Mr. Tate. It was in deep shadow. Boo would feel more comfortable in the dark” (Lee 312). This demonstrates that Boo Radley doesn’t like being in new situations and Scout understands that. Boo had the courage to go save her and her brother
There was a long jagged scar that ran across his face; what teeth he had were yellow and rotten, his eyes popped, and he drooled most of the time.” Little do they know that Boo Radley will play a huge part in their survival at the end of the book when the crazy Bob Ewell Attacks them and Boo Radley protected them, something that Jem and scout would’ve never imagined, But something that the reader could foreshadow. Due to Boo’s acts of kindness like when he returned Jem’s pants sowed after he got them caught on the barb wire fence while he was snooping and around and also the gifts he left in the knot of the tree that helped him build a deeper sentimental relationship with Jem and Scout even if the kids did not know it. Boo had built such a relationship with them that he had done something extremely courageous and protects Jem and scout from Bob
In To Kill a Mockingbird there are lots of racial, gender, and religious, discrimination. Which is shown a multiple amount of times throughout the novel. To Kill a Mockingbird is a novel written by Harper Lee which takes place in Maycomb Alabama, where there is a lot of racial discrimination. But there is also some gender, and religious, discrimination.
Option 2 Literary Analysis To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is a novel set during the 1930s in a small town in Southern Alabama called Maycomb. The story is told through the narrator, Scout, a young girl who lives with her father, a lawyer, and her older brother Jem. As a child, Scout is portrayed as a stubborn and obnoxious little girl who loves to read, play with her brother Jem, and fantasize about her mysterious neighbor, Boo Radley. However, her life gets turned upside down when Scout’s father agrees to do something that is deemed unacceptable in the south; he agrees to defend Tom Robinson, a black man who is accused of raping a white girl. Instantly, Atticus and his family go from being respected and beloved by their town, to being