We all change in various ways from the time we are children. In Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird she shows how Jem, Scout, and Dill grew up in Maycomb Alabama. She also shows the kids outlook on the world from when they were young verse as they are growing up. When the kids are young they believed Boo Radley was a killer
How Scout Develops from a Tomboy to a Young Lady in To Kill a Mockingbird
Most people behave different due to their surroundings and their family. This is because one begins to develop based on who one talks to and where one lives. That person will develop their peer’s behaviors and attitudes due to influences of others. In “To Kill a Mockingbird”, the main character has changed a lot and has lost her innocence after the beginning. In the book, Scout’s learning has been affected throughout the journey because of Atticus, Boo Radley, and Bob Ewell.
“I have found that as your wisdom and maturity develop, the number of people you blame for your own circumstances shrinks.” - Dr. Steve Maraboli
Throughout the novel, To Kill A Mockingbird, Scout begins to mature in many different ways. Besides her physical appearance that starts to develop, she begins to control her anger, she matures throughout the Tom Robinson trial, and she conquers some of her fears.
“Growth is never by mere chance; it is the result of two forces working together” - James Cash Penney. In Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird Scout demonstrates personal growth through the decreasing use of the N-word and refrained use of violent actions. Scout’s increased maturity often extends far past the community of Maycomb and those around her.
As people grow up in life they get older and lose their innocence and mature. Growing up should be fun but learning about the bad realities of your society can be difficult and life changing. In the book, To Kill A Mockingbird, as scout ( Jean Louise) grows up she sees the changes in her society, but those that make her change and the most that affect her life are her community, parenting, role of women, and courage. Scout learns more and more about the world as she gets older and she starts seeing the conflict between the whites and the blacks. Scout hears a lot of rumours about Boo Radley but never sees him. She knows how her society is bad from the day of Tom Robinson’s trial, all the rumors about Boo Radley and when she goes to church with Calpurnia.
To Kill a Mockingbird is a 1960 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel written by Harper Lee. The story is told from Lee’s main character Jean Louise Finch’s perspective. Jean Louise nicknamed Scout retells the story as an adult, recalling her 3 year journey starting at 6 years old. Throughout the plot, we experience Scout, her brother Jem, and Scout’s best friend Dill witness the case of Tom Robinson. He was a black man falsely accused of raping a white woman.
In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, author Harper Lee follows protagonist Scout Finch, who throughout the course of the story is forced to grow and mature as she learns more about both herself and her surroundings. Scout is a curious and courageous 6 year old, still learning about life through the happenings of her 1930’s hometown, Maycomb, Alabama. Over the course of the novel Harper Lee explores a number of themes to progress the plot and Scout’s development as a character, this causes the reader to gain an appreciation for these themes. Three of the most important lessons that Scout learns that help the reader gain this appreciation are; how innocence can change how someone’s surroundings are viewed, the dangers of prejudice a long with
To Kill a Mockingbird shows how a child grows throughout his or her childhood. Throughout the novel, Scout becomes a mature girl by going through several experiences with her brother and father which form an understanding of the world to her. By allowing the reader to see the coming of age of Scout by the use of first person point of view, Harper Lee shows the many lessons that Scout learns from her father Atticus; the lessons are that you do not really know a man until you have been in his shoes, don’t kill mockingbirds, and don’t judge a person because of their race.
You’re not the same person you were yesterday. You changed, you grew. Be it physically, mentally, or emotionally. And just like you change, so do characters in books. Take Scout Finch from Harper Lee’s fictional novel, To Kill a Mockingbird. At the beginning of the story, she’s 7 and just learning how the world works. She's scared of her reclusive neighbor and never wants to become what society expects her to be: a lady. At the end of the novel, 4 years later, she realizes that her reclusive neighbor is nothing to be afraid of and being a lady doesn't mean that you aren't strong. Scout changes by learning what real courage is, by walking in others shows, and by learning that things aren't always as they seem.
During the book To Kill a Mockingbird there are many life-lessons to be learned by younger characters like Scout and Jem. The book takes place in the south of United States during the 1930’s and there are many social problems such as poverty, racism and religious issues that these children don’t understand really well in the beginning of the book . Throughout the story, Scout and Jem grow from immature children to become mature teenagers with their own and more developed opinions about 1930’s society. Many characters in the book influenced this growth of maturity in the children, such as Atticus, by being the only person in the town to stand up for a black men and seeing both races as equal; Calpurnia, by showing the children how the black society works; and Miss Maudie, by teaching them a lot about the town and its social problems. Most other people in the town discriminate against the black
In the natural state of being a human, we must learn to grow up and let go of the innocence we once held onto dearly as a child. Throughout the novel, To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Lee renders the different ways the characters develop. Growing up has it’s different ways of affecting others, from gaining knowledge of the negative aspects in the world, to shedding your childhood innocence.
Most Americans endure a childhood full of happiness and carelessness. On the other hand, two siblings, Jem and Scout, grow up in the racially divided South and explore the adult world when their father is looked down upon for defending an African American. The children are forced to grow up through characters and other facets in their small, separated town of Maycomb. Throughout the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee emphasizes the loss of innocence through a series of mature and emotional events.
It’s very rare for a children to be abusive to one another. However, Scout was one of the abusive children. She beat up Walter Cunningham when she got in trouble for defending him. However, she realized that women don’t do that. In addition, she stopped being mean, and was doing the right thing. Therefore, in To Kill a Mockingbird Scout evolved the most to becoming polite, seeing people’s point of view, and becoming more of a women.
A story is always different depending on the person telling it. This is the case in To Kill a Mockingbird, a classic book by Harper Lee published in 1960. The book is about a child growing up in a racist community in Alabama and the challenges she faces. During her childhood, She messes with Boo Radley, a neighbor, goes to the trial of Tom Robinson, a innocent black man, and is attacked on Halloween night. The story has received much popularity, and has since then been made into a movie. Although the book and the movie follow the same general plot, the book contains many important events missing from the movie that lead to the character development of the main character, Scout.