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Silence and Stereotype in To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

Decent Essays

Many times in society, people tend to create different stereotypes or view people as “different” or “unusual”. People are constantly judging before considering facts and other valuable information. Sadly, most victims that are being judged are wrongly convicted. The idea of judging and characterizing a person by how he/she looks, seems to be typical and common. Very few people in today’s day and age take the time to discover the true qualities of a person who may be convicted and is either behind bars or being judged for things they have never done. Sometimes, the people who are being as weird, inferior or irrelevant tend to become extremely important and even influential in books, movies and real life. Similarly, in Harper Lee’s novel, To …show more content…

The readers are introduced to Boo as someone who spends all of his time in his home and a man of a harsh past but he does not put it out on people or show his anger in a way people would start to actually think he is harmful. Instead, he chooses to keep himself secluded because of all the gossip going on in town. It also evident that Boo was not harmful since scout claims that “Boo’s children needed him.” (370). This quote directly lets the readers know that even though Boo was not Scout and Jem’s father, he was almost like a father to them. A father who is loving, caring and anything, but harmful. Similarly Tom also had children waiting for him at home that yearned for him when he was gone for work. Boo and Tom were both very similar in the sense that they are both silent and secluded from all the commotion happening in Maycomb County. They are not involved in all the gossip and certainly not causing harm to anyone in town. Although, Boo and Tom both examples of a mockingbird they are both extremely judged in their county as well. As mentioned before, the readers know that Boo and Tom are very innocent people in the story, but many townspeople tend to make assumptions and gossip when they have no factual evidence of the real truth. Luckily, Atticus is a great example of a non-judgmental person when he advises his daughter to constantly show empathy by putting herself in other people’s shoes and advising her that she will

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