The book that I have chosen to read is, To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee. In this book, it is about a single parent, Atticus (Atticus Finch) with two children. Jem (Jeremy Atticus Finch) and Scout (Jean Louise Finch). The protagonist is Scout. The story covers a span of three years, during which the main characters undergo significant changes. Not quite midway through the story, Scout and her brother Jem discover that their father is going to represent a black man by the name of Tom Robinson. He is doing this because the man is being accused of raping a white woman named Mayella Violet Ewell. Throughout the story, Scout and Jem were walking along the sidewalk back to their house, which so happened to be passing the Radley’s house. As they were passing by, they saw a tree with something in it. So, each time they saw something in that tree, they would take it. One day, they took so many things, that they decided to tell the person, whoever it was, thank you. So, they wrote a note and placed it inside of the tree, where they would find all of the objects. The next day, when Scout and Dill were passing by the tree to see their response. They saw Mr. Nathan Radley putting cement inside of the hole. Scout and Jem were overall sad and crying after they had found this out. The story took …show more content…
The novel starts out cheerful and positive about Maycomb, Alabama , but then as it goes on, Scout begins to see the cruel prejudice of the Maycomb people against blacks, and their disgust that Atticus is defending a black man in court. Scale and her brother begin to learn about how unfair society is, that a whole race of people can be mistreated because of the color of their skin, and some people are seen as less important because they don’t have much money. “ Yes suh. I felt sorry for her, she seemed to try more’n the rest of em’—“ “You felt sorry for her, you felt sorry for her?” Mr. Gilmer seemed ready to rise to the ceiling.”(Lee pg.
Another way Scout has changed since the beginning of the book is she understands people have both good and bad qualities that coexist within them, as she becomes closer to an adult and encounters evil in the world. 20. Miss Gates’ lesson to the class about Hitler’s prosecution of Jew’s is ironic, because she herself came out of the courthouse after the trial ended and responded by telling Miss Stephanie Crawford that “it was about time that someone taught them a lesson” when referring to the blacks in the town. It reveals that most people during that time where racist and prejudice to some extent in Maycomb. An example that is similar in our current society portrayed in this chapter is how white males get paid the highest salary, but people of other races and women get paid lower salaries for
After his adventures at the Radley house Jem is in a bad mood for a week, and then the children go back to school. Scout starts second grade which is apparently just as bad as first grade and Jem tells Scout that he was freaked out after retrieving his pants from the Radley home because they were mended badly and were sitting on top of the fence instead of being where he had left them. A few days later on their way home Jem and Scout see a ball of twine in a knothole of a tree on the Radley proper, however they leave it there thinking that the knothole may be someone 's secret hiding place. When it is still there a few days later they decide it is okay to take the twine and consequently several other things left inside the tree. Over the next
The theme of the novel was that inequality and discrimination exist and need to be stopped. Throughout the story Scout and Jem have their innocence destroyed because their father was defending an African American in court. They slowly come to the realization that their “nice” Maycomb society is not so nice and is actually made up of a bunch of harsh, and judgmental people, some like Bob Ewell, who could only keep saying that “Some nigger’d raped his girl.” (Lee 167) The children also came to their own realization that society is not always right and that they must have individual opinions.
In the book To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Scout and Jem both live in Maycomb, Alabama with their dad Atticus. They also meet their friend Dill who visits every summer. In the end of the book Jem and Scout are on their way home back from their school halloween pageant, then they get suddenly attacked by Bob Ewell. Then suddenly a stranger jumps in and is able to fight off Bob by stabbing him, and it turns out the stranger was Boo Radley. Jem suffered a broken arm from the fight and is knocked unconscious.
On the surface Maycomb County might seem like quiet, nice place to live, but deeper into the town hidden identities are discovered, courage is needed, and the maturation of characters is crucial to unearthing the truth about life in the 1930s. In Harper Lee’s novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, readers learn about a small town named Maycomb County and the struggles that occur within it. During the Great Depression and a peak of Southern racism, readers met the main character Scout. Scout, a girl ages six to nine, narrates this story for years and the happenings in the town. Years pass and different incidents arise including a court case about rape, a mean old neighbor, and the mysterious man next door.
By the end of the novel during the court scene and Tom’s death, we see the final stages of her development and how far she has come as she can 't stand for Tom’s discrimination which only further proves her power to rebel against something that everyone conforms to. This shows her make her own opinion about racism which creates the exciting environment that we find ourselves in while reading. The novel has many important points and moments which make a lasting impression on us even after reading the novel. One of the biggest ideas which are focused on in this essay is Scout 's development and how it allows her to forge her own opinions. Scout learns to separate herself from the conforming sheep that Maycomb residents are described to be.
Sleepy Maycomb, like other Southern towns, suffers considerably during the Great Depression. Many things happen, and poverty, racism, and violence encompass nearly everyone in Maycomb. Poverty, racism, and violence reaches from the privileged families, like the Finches, to the Negroes and “white trash” Ewells, who live on the outskirts of town. Harper Lee paints a vivid picture of life in this humid Alabama town where nearly everything explodes into conflict. The theme of racism, poverty, and violence is present throughout nearly every chapter in To Kill a Mockingbird.
Nathan Radley could be hiding something from the kids that he doesn’t want them to know. Scout was upset when they figured out that the knothole was plugged, and as a good brother. As Jem is, he told her “Don’t you cry, now, Scout… don’t cry.” The quote shows that the tree was very important to Jem and Scout because of the gifts and them sending the letter trying to communicate to Boo Radley. If the tree was not plugged with cement, Jem and Scout would eventually sent the letter to whom that were sending the gifts.
People's use of tolerance, discrimination, and integrity have changed tremendously in the past century. In the small town of Maycomb, Atticus, Scout, and several other characters face their own dilemmas that shape them as characters. Throughout the book, they display several different themes as they conquer these real-world problems. The town faces plenty of hardships throughout the course of the story, but always seems to overcome them. Harper Lee displays discrimination, tolerance, and integrity because they indicate the improvements and struggles people in the 1930’s faced, as well as help in order to change our current society.
Atticus puts down his newspaper he was reading, and Scout thinks that he seems to be expecting them. The kids hide in a nearby doorway and overhear a man telling Atticus to let them through. Atticus tells them to go home. When things begin to get intense, Scout runs out to Atticus, and Atticus tells Jem to take Scout and Dill home. Jem doesn't want to, and Atticus and Jem fight.
Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird is a novel that show the life of a southern state od Alabama during the “black racism” time period, where majority of the people had the mentality that (quote) with the exception of a few. To chosen to portray it from the eyes of Scout Finch, from a child’s point of view. Living in Maycomb, in the midst of a conservative society of the 1930’s and 20’s Southern America Scout Finch is an extra ordinary child.
In To Kill A Mockingbird, Harper Lee teaches us about the town of Maycomb County during the late 1930s, where the characters live in isolation and victimization. Through the perspective of a young Jean Louise “Scout” Finch, readers will witness the prejudice that Maycomb produces during times where people face judgement through age, gender, skin colour, and class, their whole lives. Different types of prejudice are present throughout the story and each contribute to how events play out in the small town of Maycomb. Consequently, socially disabling the people who fall victim from living their life comfortably in peace. Boo Radley and his isolation from Maycomb County, the racial aspects of Tom Robinson, and the decision Atticus Finch makes as a lawyer, to defend a black man has all made them fall in the hands of Maycomb’s prejudice ways.
How does Harper Lee vividly capture the effects of racism and social inequality on the citizens of Maycomb county in ‘To kill a mockingbird’? In the novel, ‘To kill a mockingbird’, Harper Lee conveys the theme of racism and social inequality by setting up the story in Maycomb, a small community in Alabama, the U.S back in 1930s. Lee presents some of the social issues of 1930s such as segregation and poverty in the novel. These issues are observed and examined through the innocent eyes of a young girl, Scout, the narrator.
Also the story takes place in the 1930s, this explains why everyone in the book automatically downgrades black people. The next character to be introduced is Atticus Finch the father of Jem and Scout Finch. Atticus is a very wise man that has a very fair and impartial way of looking at life. Along the way we find Dill a character that is included for none other than supporting reasons. It seems like that Scout is the protagonist of the story and that Bob Ewell is the antagonist of the story.
I have finished reading To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. There were 376 pages total in the book. This book is about a family of three. The family is made up of two kids Scout, Jem and their dad Atticus. Atticus defends a black man in court for a crime he did not commit.