Alexandra irked Scout on her insistance to act more ladylike("Chapter 9." To Kill A Mockingbird.
Alexandra irked Scout on her insistance to act more ladylike("Chapter 9." To Kill A Mockingbird.
Calpurnia and Aunt Alexandra’s beliefs are a major cause of conflict throughout To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. This conflict is not only between Calpurnia, Atticus Finch's’ housekeeper, and Alexandra, Atticus Finch’s sister and the aunt of his children. Furthermore, their moral differences create conflict between themselves and other characters involved in the plot. However, these two important characters aren’t only different. Calpurnia and Alexandra have many similarities, as well. Calpurnia and Aunt Alexandra have similarities and differences in their moral beliefs, their role in the Finch house, and their character traits.…
Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird is a book based on family and good relations. Most of the book is founded off of position, physical and mental traits, and racism.One of the main characters of the book was a man named Atticus Finch and he was well known in Maycomb. Atticus was a very influential person in To Kill A Mockingbird and his role and relationships in Maycomb were key points in the story.One of his most important relationships Atticus had would be the relationship he had with his community. The roles of Atticus in To Kill A Mockingbird affected everyone and this is why he was such an influential person in the story.…
The narrator, Scout from the novel To Kill A Mockingbird, written by Harper Lee, is a grown woman telling the story through her eyes as a young girl. Most of the book’s charm is gathered from the ironicness of her perspective of growing up in the depression era in the South. As the novel progresses Scout becomes more courageous, intelligent, and mature which helps her develop into a better person.…
At the beginning of the novel, Scout turns out to be very rude and stubborn. She couldn’t tell who company was and who company wasn’t. She tells Calpurnia that “He ain’t company, Cal, he’s just a Cunningham” (18) before she is cut off and told that anyone that steps inside the house is company. Even after Calpurnia’s words, she didn’t listen. This adds to her being stubborn. She argued with her teacher 3 times on the first day of school. Miss Caroline had a completely bad day thanks to Scout. Miss Caroline said “You’re starting off on the wrong foot in every way, my dear. Hold out your hand” (16). Her lesson came from Atticus only.…
I am reading To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. In chapters 10 through 15 the trial becomes one of the main topics and causes many conflicts. Aunt Alexandra comes to stay with the Finch family, which leads to some quarrelling. In this journal I will be characterizing Atticus and questioning whether Calpurnia or Alexandra is an excellent mother to the children.…
One of the prejudice events, was with her own family. Her Aunt Alexandra is proud to be part of Finch family. She only likes to associate with the people as the same or higher class than her family. Like whenever Scout and Jem invited Walter to eat she didn’t accept it. Also whenever Scout plays with Walter , she would get mad/upset. She had also said “He is trash, that is why you cannot play with…
Have you ever been accused for something you didn’t do? In the book “To Kill A Mockingbird” a black man Tom Robinson is falsely accused of rape but Atticus finch is defending him. Atticus believes that everyone should be treated fairly. Also Atticus’s neighbor Miss Maudie takes time to enjoy life and tries to be as positive as possible. She share these beliefs and becomes an example to Atticus’s children Jem and scout finch.…
In the novel, Scout’s aunt, Alexandra, comes to visit them for a while. She decided that Scout needed some feminine influence (Lee 127). Aunt Alexandra acted like a perfect Southern woman and was very comely. She wore corsets, powdered her face, and had tea parties. At these tea parties, she would gossip with the women of the town (Lee 128, 228). During this time in real life, the ladies who were considered proper wore dresses and skirts. They also need to behave with high moral standards to be considered proper. It was more important than what they looked like (Cruz). The actions of Aunt Alexandra being a proper woman in the South implies that Lee was influenced by real events and behaviors to write her novel. In the 1930s, it was considered improper for women to wear men's clothing, to curse, and to play sports. For a woman to do any of these things would be considered very inappropriate (Cruz). In the book, Scout wears overalls, unless she is going to school. She wears a dress then, but she does not like it very much. She also plays outside with her brother, Jem, and their friend, Dill (Lee 15). Scout gets into fights at school and once she beat up Dill because he made her mad (Lee 22, 41). Aunt Alexandra is very opinionated and tries to get Scout to act more like a proper Southern lady. She complains…
In chapters 17-19 of To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, the court case, Ewell v. Robinson, examines the accusation of rape by Tom Robinson, an African-American male. According to Tom Robinson, he walked by Mayella Ewell’s house every day and she always asked him to help her. Tom claimed that in the spring Mayell a asked him to chop up the chiffarobe contrary to Mayella and Bob’s testimony. Mayella asked Tom to come inside and help fix a door but he goes in to her house and the door appears to be unbroken. According to Mayella, Tom snuck up behind her, hit, and pushed her down then raped her. However, Tom…
Aunt Alexandra, is the sister of Atticus and aunt to Scout and Jem. Social status is in high regard in her mind. She sees Calpurnia as more of an object than as a person. She does not accept Calpurnia as part of the family, as Atticus, Jem, and Scout do. Aunt Alexandra moves in with the family during the trial of Tom Robinson, because she feels as though Scout looks up to Calpurnia as more of a motherly figure. In ways she wants Scout to obey the social law at that time in Maycomb that black people were to be looked down upon. Aunt Alexandra says, “Put my bag in the front room, Calpurnia.”(169) She automatically takes the assumption that Calpurnia is more of a slave than a helper in the household. This quote shows Aunt Alexandra’s opinions on colored people, which are not very appropriate.…
In To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Atticus Finch’s choice to represent Tom Robinson and completely fulfill his duties in a rape case has many severe consequences. Three of them are, Scout and Jem being ridiculed by their peers, Tom Robinson’s death, and Scout and Jem being attacked by Bob Ewell.…
She wanted to change Scout into a ‘proper lady’, determined to make a better difference than Calpurnia. Created more problems than solutions. Didn’t have respect for Calpurnia.…
Moral courage is a quality many hope to have, but cannot achieve. In the novel To Kill A Mockingbrid, by Harper Lee, she uses a character named Atticus Finch, the father of the main characters, to show moral courage. She uses Atticus to show readers that despite not knowing the outcome, one can still succeed if one musters enough courage. Throughout the novel, Atticus shows evidence of being a brave man. He helps Tom Robinson when the lynch mob came to take him, he shot a rabid dog, saving the entire neighbourhood, and finally, he agrees to take Tom Robinson’s case.…
Another person in this same social class is Miss Maudie Atkinson. She grew up with the Finch’s and is an old friend of theirs. She is now Atticus’s neighbor and is loved by his children. Aunt Alexandra is also part if this because she is known as the “perfect example of what a southern lady should act like.” She is part of the Finch’s family and is highly respected by the community.…
Aunt Alexandra shows that family is a necessary evil with her interactions with Scout. When Aunt Alexandra arrives at the Finch’s home to stay with them, Scout loathes her since she wants to change Scout and wants her to be more refined. Scout also despises her aunt since she thinks that Atticus is not raising Scout properly and offers to help her be more lady-like. Even though Scout may not realize this, Aunt Alexandra is strict towards her because she wants her to be prepared for the challenges she may face in life. Aunt Alexandra is not only trying to teach Scout to be more modest, she is teaching her to be more social. Aunt Alexandra said to Scout: “Speak to your cousin Lily’... ‘Who?’ Your cousin Lily Brooke,’ said Aunt Alexandra. ‘She our cousin? I didn’t know that.’ Aunt Alexandra managed to smile in a way that conveyed a gentle apology to Cousin Lily and firm disapproval to me” (176). Aunt Alexandra is trying to teach Scout that you can talk to people without being rude and offensive. Aunt Alexandra taught Jem and Scout, but mostly Scout is to act more refined. At the beginning of the novel, Aunt Alexandra was not excepting to the Finch family. As the novel came to an end she (Aunt Alexandra) showed that she is more accepting of her family “She brought me something to put on, and had I thought about it then, I would have never let her forget it: “Put these on, darling,” she said, handing me the garments she most despised” (354). That action showed that people do change people. At the Missionary Circle tea, Aunt Alexandra demonstrates how to be lady-like when she heard the news on Tom Robinson and she came back and pretend like nothing happens. Most importantly they learned to respect their family because you should always be by your family's side and respect their…