Harper Lee’s, To Kill a Mockingbird is about a little girl who experience many outcasts in her life. The story take place in a small Alabama town during the great depression. This was also a time where many Caucasian disliked African Americans. Jean Louise Finch “Scout” is a young girl who grows up in Maycomb. The book uses Mockingbird as a symbol for outcast. Scout experience many mockingbirds and is also consider a mockingbird. Treat many mockingbirds with respect because they have done nothing to you. Mockingbirds are completely harmless songbirds who live only to sing and make beautiful music. Atticus advised his children that if they went hunting to “shoot all the blue jays you want, if you can hit’em, but remember it’s a sin to kill …show more content…
Dill is best friends with Jem and Scouts and their goal for the past years was to get Boo Radley out of the house. When Dill first met Jem and Scout he would tell them stories of about his father he did not have. Dill never knew his father growing up and did not have nobody to look up to. Most of his life he was on his own and felt abandon. He would also make up stories of his father to make himself feel better. Dill had may family problem causing him to run away from home. He ran away to Maycomb to his Aunt’s house. During the trial of Tom Robinson Dill eyes and ear were open. He understood many things that were going on. When Tom Robison was convicted guilty many of the African Americans were frustrated. Dill wanted to be clown that made people. NEED …show more content…
He is twenty-five years old, and has a wife with 3 children. He has been in trouble with the law before and got thirty days in jail for disorderly conduct. Tom Robinson is accused of raping and beating Mayella Ewell by Bob Ewell. Tom Robinson is an African American which causes him to get treated terrible and that caused him to be a Mockingbird. He was wrongfully accused of raping Mayella Ewell when it was obvious that it could not do. Tom Robinson left arm was disable and only can use his right, that made it difficult for him to be the one to beat up Mayella. He was innocent and did nothing
He had been going to Maycomb during the summer for years. “They must not know you’re here,” said Jem. “We’d know if they were lookin’ for you.” Dill abandoned his home to be with the Finches. It seems as if he thinks Maycomb is his actual home.
In Dill’s first summer in Maycomb, Jem tells him the story of Boo Radley. Dill becomes very curious of the monster that Jem describes, and Dill decides that they should get Boo to come out of his house. They try many different tactics, but each time they are reprimanded by Atticus when they get caught. It’s not until much later in the book that they all learn why they should just leave Boo alone. During Dill’s second summer of the novel, Dill runs away from home because he misses Scout.
Tom Robinson's life was unfairly taken by Maycomb county all because of 2 people, Mayella Ewell and Bob Ewell. Mayella Ewell is a 19 year old girl who lives with her dad Bob Ewell in Maycomb county. Mayella and her father are trying to convince the judges that Tom Robinson raped her and beat her but that seems like it didnt happen because Tom Robinson has disability. During Tom Robinson's trial whenever Mayella was asked to talk about her father or any exact details she starts tantruming and hesitating.
In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Dill can be best described as the everyman archetype because he provides a sense of comfort and comedic relief to the reader. Charles Baker Harris, better known as Dill to the reader, is introduced almost immediately in the book. He is the best friend of Jem and Scout and assists them in their ridiculous shenanigans of childhood. One important event he was in attendance for happened to be the trial of Tom Robinson, a black man, versus Mayella Ewell, a white woman. He, and many others, were quite outraged by the outcome of the trial.
The main characters aren’t the only ones who contribute to the innocent perspective of Maycomb. Dill, the best friend of both Scout and Jem uses his emotions and past experiences to relate to the hatred black people like Tom Robinson face on a daily basis. During the Tom Robinson trial, Dill gets upset over the way Tom is treated by Mr. Gilmer: “This was as much as I heard of Mr. Gilmer’s cross examination, because Jem made me take DIll out. For some reason DIll had started crying and couldn’t stop; quietly at first, then his sobs were heard by several people in the balcony” (Lee 265). Dill later tells us that he didn’t appreciate Mr. Gilmer’s attitude toward Tom Robinson.
Does society outcast those who defy its norms? Are unique and special individuals tossed aside in favor of rule following drones? By looking at different literature such as To Kill a Mockingbird, Boy Erased, and The Handmaid 's tale it is clear that people are often treated as outcasts when they defy societal norms. In To Kill a Mockingbird Maycomb treats mixed-race children like outcasts because they aren’t one race or the other.
There was a full jury of racist white men, because of his race nobody paid attention to him. They couldn't do 6 white men and 6 black men either because of course the black men would go to Tom the white men would go to Mayella. They also didn't pay attention to any of the evidence because the person who slapped Mayella was left handed. Tom is right handed and can't even move his arm. Although they think that the jury kept Tom Robinson safe and enjoyable trial.
When Dill stepped up to his father he changed his life by making it real clear that he was going to have a future that he was proud of. His father felt betrayed because he isn’t following the serpent king path and is not following god's laws. His father tries to make Dill feel selfish for abandoning his mother and leaving his family behind. Without Dill taking these big first steps his family would continue dragging him down with
Although this occupied his seven year old imagination, he still held strong to his mind 's pledge to be needed and appreciated. Although this is a highly strong and unlikely inference this could be debated, by the textual evidence of Dill going back to mississippi because through his experiences in Maycomb and through Jem he begins to think and act more like this ten year old boy. As the saying goes’ “Respect your elders.” Although this refers to obeying them Dill kicks it up a notch and follows in Jem’s footsteps through “peer pressure” and social class. Dill feels unwanted as his biological father isn’t in the picture but in the middle of the novel he regains his idea of a family unit when he gets a new dad.
Dill’s character brings out the playful innocence by his exaggerations and stories. “Dill recited this narrative” (Lee 186) about him being “bound in chains and left to die” (Lee 186) by his hateful stepfather. Because of this, he ran away to Maycomb and hid under Scout’s bed before being discovered. In actuality, he believed that his parents neglected him and he was upset. Being at the age of about seven, Dill had to have got on a train and walked many miles to reach his destination.
Mocking birds repeat what they hear from not only their own kind but other kinds of birds too. Dill repeats what he hears from adults, he is always saying things such as “this person said”. During the novel we see how much Scout and Jem mature and grow up, but Dill stays a child throughout the whole book. He feels unloved, which is why he runs away and always makes up stories about his life, because in reality he wants the accounts to be true. At the trial Dills innocence is shown, he cries about how ‘Boo Radley is treated by Mr. Gilmer.
Dill surprisingly ran away from his family and came to Scout's house to see them and he stayed the night. Jem got a feeling that Atticus wasn't where he said he was and they found him in the jail as he waited for people that he was expecting. -Summary for Ch. 16-20 (AT LEAST FOUR SENTENCES): In chapters 16-20, Scout asked why the mob wanted to hurt Atticus even though she did not get an answer.
To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee is the story of a small town named Maycomb Located in Alabama, highlighting the adventures of the finch children and many other people in the small town. The people in this town are very judgemental and of each other and it often leads to people being labeled with stereotypes and people think they know everything about that person however that is not reality. It is not possible to know the reality of a person 's life by placing a stereotype without seeing it through their own eyes and experiencing the things they experience. This happens often throughout the story with many people in the town. People are labeled as many things such a “monster” a “nigger” and many other things that seem to put them in their
In the novel To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Tom Robinson and Arthur “Boo” Radley are two characters who represent the mockingbird. In the midst of finding who Boo truly is, Atticus Finch explains to his children, Jem and Scout, that it is a sin to kill the bird because they don’t do anything but make music. As the story progresses, and the two “mockingbirds” are being accused and attacked both verbally and physically, the identity of the mockingbirds surfaces. Tom Robinson was a crippled African American man whose left arm was a foot shorter than his right, where it was caught in a cotton gin.
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