Many characters in To Kill a Mockingbird are based on individuals in Harper Lee’s childhood. The narrator, Scout Finch, is a young girl with an inquisitive nature, who lives with her father and older brother. Atticus Finch, Scout’s father, is an attorney and a disenfranchised member of a prominent family in Maycomb. Sparknotes.com describes Scout’s father as “a widower with a dry…
“‘Well, Dill, after all he’s just a Negro.’ ‘I don’t care one speck. It ain’t right somehow it ain’t right to do ‘em that way. Hasn’t anybody got any business talkin’ like that-it just makes me sick,’”(Lee, 266). In the novel To Kill A Mockingbird author Harper Lee lays out the story of the Finch family consisting of two siblings, Jem and Scout, along with their widowed father Atticus. This family is faced with a tough break when Atticus get appointed a case to defend an African American (Tom Robinson) in the time of extreme discrimination. Growing up shapes and builds minds to what will fully become of them in future years even though there may be obstacles to endeavor through the process.…
To Kill A Mockingbird, a fast-paced novel by Harper Lee, follows the trial of Tom Robinson. Throughout the novel multiple characters add life to the story, but only one stands out. Although the trial made everyone a little crazy, Atticus Finch does the best he can to act as a respectful man. Atticus Finch is a lawyer who defends the best he can, a gentleman who always keeps his composure, and a father who educates his children.…
In the book To Kill a Mockingbird written by Harper Lee, one of the main characters is Atticus Finch. He is a highly looked upon lawyer in the small town of Maycomb county. He has two children, Jem and Jean Louise Finch. Atticus has a unique way of parenting his kids that some people do not approve of. He often gets criticized on how he raises his kids. Atticus Finch has flaws but, he is a respectable character within the book.…
In Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird, Scout Finch is the protagonist. She lives in a town called Maycomb. Scout is a young girl who has a brother nicknamed Jem, and a father named Atticus. Throughout To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee shows Scout Finch as literate, curious, and violent.…
ticking to his beliefs,Atticus Finch’s actions to defend a “black” man accused of the rape of a “white” woman affect how the whole family was treated and seen. At school Scout is made fun of by one of her classmates Cecil Jacobs when he announced that “Scout Finch's daddy defended niggers”(99).(new to Scout, doesn’t know the proper way to react, very defensive) Scout also get another taste of this at Finch's landing where Francis comments’ ”I guess it ain’t your fault if Uncle Atticus is a nigger-lover besides,but I’m here to tell you it is certainly does mortify the rest of the family...but now he’s turned out a nigger-lover we’ll never be able to walk the streets of Maycomb agin. He’s ruinin’ the family, that’s what he’s doin” (110).Francis is upfront about the situation and foresees …( the reaction of Maycomb to the Finches ie Mr. Ewell) to come. He touches upon the consequences that the whole family could endure because of Atticus. Atticus is essentially “ruinin’the family”(110). more specifically the family name. His actions to defend a “nigger” will cost his extended family humiliation and hatred because they too have the last name Finch; is now associated with Atticus, Tom, and the trial in Maycomb.…
Atticus Finch, a character in the novel To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee questions the values of society. Atticus expresses the right for equality among all races. Atticus is the lawyer for Tom Robinson and this story focuses on the conflict within the trial he defends in order to support equality.…
“I speak to everyone in the same way, whether he is the garbage man or the president of the university” - (Albert Einstein). These words reflect the way Atticus Finch, protagonist, attorney, and father in Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird, lives his life. There is no difference to him in regards to race, social status, or gender. Atticus Finch is an admirable gentleman who demonstrates intelligence and respectfulness throughout the Tom Robinson trial and his interactions with people who despised the fact that he was taking the case. He strongly believes in respect for people of color and passes his belief down to his children by taking the Tom Robinson case. Although he is at times too trusting of people, his words and actions continue to prove to his children and community how a real gentleman behaves.…
Ideal families are usually formed by values, morals, and love between each others. However, in some cases, different families may form badly through separation. The Finches, the Cunninghams, and the Ewells were examples of families that were used by Harper Lee, the author of the story To Kill a Mockingbird, to demonstrate the values and costumes of families in Maycomb, Alabama. ,To determine whether if a family is an ideal family or not, one must investigate what an ideal family, the Finches, is like. A good example of a quote that was shown in To Kill a Mockingbird, was on page 24 and 25, "Hush your mouth! Don 't matter who they are, anybody… you can just set here and eat in the kitchen!" This quote was said by Calpurnia, a black cook of the Finches, when she was punishing Scout for being rude to little Walter Cunningham. This shows that even though the Finch family is missing one member of its family, the mom, Calpurnia is capable of replacing that gap. Another example of a quote that proves that the Finches are an ideal family was on page 127, "Jem 's growing up now and you are…
According to Google, a family is defined to be a group consisting of parents and children living together in a household. To Kill a Mockingbird never stops describing family to us. In Maycomb, Alabama, where the book takes place, family is everything. According to Aunt Alexandrea, every family has a “streak.” Many of her values around family loyalty and staying strong under pressure are shared throughout the novel. In To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper lee teaches readers about family by providing a variety of them. She teaches us about family in many different ways.…
The novel To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee has a naive view of life in the South of America in the 1930’s. The book is written through the eyes of Jem and Scout Finch. Scout is a young girl that is growing up around her father’s case. Her father, Atticus Finch, is a lawyer who is defending a black man, Tom Robinson, who is fighting the charge of raping a white lady. The lives of the characters are changed from the effects of racism in the book To Kill a Mockingbird.…
Atticus is the father figure for his kids, Jem and Scout in To Kill a Mockingbird. The Finch family lives in Maycomb, Alabama during the Great Depression. The kids spend much of their time playing with their gregarious neighbor, Dill, and spying on their reclusive and mysterious neighbor Boo Radley. When their father, Atticus, who is a widowed man and a respected lawyer, defends a black man named Tom Robinson against fabricated rape charges against a white girl, he is in/at a detriment. The trial, events following and the people they have interactions with, expose Jem and Scout to racism and stereotyping. This completely changes their view of the world. The novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, uses characterization to portray how a child’s…
The Finch family includes Scout Finch, Jem Finch, and their father Atticus Finch. For Atticus being a lawyer, and for being a wealthy white man, the Finch family had it pretty well off compared to others during the Great Depression in Maycomb, Alabama. Before first grade had even started, Scout already knew how to read because Atticus had taught when she was an infant and they have been reading stories ever since. Scout would be considered one of the smartest in her class because many of her classmates have been held back for a couple of years.…
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is a riveting novel about a family discovering the cruelness of the world. The story is told through the eyes of Jean Louise "Scout" Finch, a girl who spends her time running around in overalls and chasing after her older brother Jem. Throughout the course of the novel, Scout witnesses the revolting aspects of human nature and learns the answers to questions concerning evilness corrupting the beautiful innocence of a child.…
In the first chapter, we are introduced to Jean Louise Finch. She is very often called Scout and she has a older brother named Jem. We discover the past of her family in the chapter. The history told of her family dates back to her early ancestors who settled in America. Her ancestors who were a part of the farm that was known as Finch’s Landing were prosperous. Jem and Scout’s mother died when they were young. Their father is a lawyer and has a women named Calpurnia helping take care of his children.…