As people grow in life, they mature and change in many different ways. Harper Lee is the author of To Kill a Mocking Bird. This book is about Scout Finch and her life in the 1930’s in Maycomb County, Alabama. Harpe, shows how Scout matures and progresses in this book along with many other things. For example Scout, the main character, realizes her town is racist after the Tom Robinson trial. Harper also informs the reader about things Scout does not understand throughout the book. One of the things she demonstrates is the reason why Jem, Scout’s brother, is acting different. She does not know what people act like at that age because she is a lot younger, so all of his behavior is new to her. One of the other examples Harper shows is the very unique relationship between Miss Caroline, Scout’s teacher, and Scout. They would like each other, but Miss Caroline’s teaching strategy is bad for Scout because she is able read.…
Everyone grows up, but at different rates and different ways. The book To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is about a girl named Scout and her brother, Jem, who grows up in Maycomb County a time when racism was very common in Alabama. Their father, Atticus Finch, is a defense attorney who helps defend Tom Robinson, an African American, from being accused of rape. The book takes place in the 1930s after the Great Depression while also struggling for Civil Rights. From beginning to end, Scout innocently grows up by first childishly making fun of Boo Radley, beginning to understand what goes on in her town, and growing to develop to become feminine female.…
As Jem grows up, he begins to face many challenges and learns to take responsibility. Throughout the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, Jem ages from ten to thirteen. He goes through the same issues as adults in the Maycomb community do and in time he begins to understand the lesson that is to be learned. Jem begins to follow Atticus’ footsteps and his courage becomes stronger. He grows moodier and confusing as the story becomes darker.…
When growing up in today's world, people must face the many challenges of maturing. Whether it is physically, emotionally, or mentally, every person matures individually. In the novel To Kill A Mockingbird, the court trial of Tom Robinson matures three main characters in the book. They learn what growing up is all about. Jem, Scout, and Dill are the most affected by the trial and all matures throughout the book.…
Throughout the novel, To Kill A Mockingbird, many characters change their views of life. Undergoing obstacles changed the lives and perspectives of the characters in the novel. As times change in a person’s life so do their perspective of life. Jem, Scout, and Dill have various adventures that mature them, and allow them to understand how the world works in the mind of an adult. The children’s mind slowly transforms from understanding situations like an adult to having the mind of an adult.…
Forging in the Midst of Order, Creating Chaos, and Revealing Changes “I think there are just one type of folks. Folks” ( Lee 231) says Scout, an eight-year-old girl filled with curiosity, innocence, and an open mind in Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird. Lee portrays her views through Scout, who has not experienced the world and believes that each person, regardless of their character, race, or class, has the right to be treated equally amongst all. This does not occur in Maycomb, the small Alabama town in which Scout resides, and although she thinks that everyone is equal, Scout’s journey in life makes her realize that this is not true.…
In Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, the importance of defending and protecting the defenseless is very prominent throughout the entire story. To Kill a Mockingbird is about two children, Jean Louise Finch, who is referred to as Scout, and her older brother Jeremy Atticus Finch, who is referred to as Jem. They both live with their father, Atticus Finch, in the small, dull town of Maycomb. The novel showcases the events and timeline of Scout and Jem’s journey into maturity, as they learn about the importance of protecting the innocent and defending the defenseless. Harper Lee examines the importance of protecting the vulnerable members of society, as is shown through the characters of Tom Robinson, Arthur Radley, and Walter Cunningham.…
In the literary classic To Kill a Mockingbird, moral development is very clearly seen in the character of Jem Finch. Over the course of the two-year narrative, his ideas of right and wrong change and grow drastically. He becomes unafraid of voicing his opinion and breaking social rules, exemplified through his bold opinions and hope regarding the Robinson case, as well as grows tremendously in his definition of bravery and how it should be expressed. As he matures, Jem Finch’s ideas about bravery and social rules grow and change as he encounters new experiences with the residents of Maycomb, experiences that shape his morality into that of a young adult.…
One of the most unforgettable books written is Harper lee's To Kill a Mockingbird. Inside the book remains a man named Atticus Finch, a lawyer who lives in the southern county of Maycomb. Unfortunately, his wife passed away due to a sudden heart attack two years after the birth of their daughter, Jean Louise. Consequently, Atticus raised their two children, Jeremy Atticus known as Jem, and Jean, known as Scout. Ten year old Jem, who loves to explore and Six year old Scout, who solves problems with her fists, but learns to act more mature than other people. Nevertheless, Atticus shows the characteristics of a good father and a fair man. Through raising his children, Atticus shows his morality, empathy, and forgiveness.…
As a kid, the process of identifying yourself is difficult. Figuring out who you want to be, where you want to go, and who you want to be around are substantial tasks. The largest task of all though is identifying who you want to be as a person. How you want others to think of you. But most of all how you think of yourself. This process is completed with the understanding of right and wrong, and the experiences you face as a child. Moral growth and our own identities are formed through how we grow up. It is formed through our childhood, and experiences we face. Jeremy Finch grew up before our eyes in the novel To Kill a Mockingbird. He did not only become taller, stronger and older, rather his identity and views about the world advanced as the book and time processed. The novel To Kill a Mockingbird is narrated to the reader by a young girl, Jean Louise(Scout) Finch, as she grows up in the small town of Maycomb Alabama. The book is written with dramatic irony, in a very racist community. The family faces challenges of injustices they view of…
The perspective many people have to society's ways, has a great impact on the way people think, believe, and hold, when faced with the issue of their ethical principles. Harper Lee, tackles this predicament and explains it through the ideas in her novel, To Kill A Mockingbird, by showing how perspective affects the beliefs people attain to. Through Atticus Finch the heroine of the novel, and the father of the protagonist Jean-Louise (Scout) and her brother, Jeremy Atticus Finch (Jem), Lee displays the wisdom of Atticus in the events surrounding the air-rifles, Scouts fighting habits, and Mrs. Dubose’s addiction, and the way that Atticus’ perspective has shaped these beliefs.…
Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird is set in a time of the depression and where racism is dominant, in Maycomb, Alabama in the 1930’s. Jem is the older brother of Scout and sometimes he does not take responsibility of his actions but now knows that he needs to be responsible and courageous. Jem is brave. He shows bravery while looking out for Scout, taking chances and standing up for what he believes in.…
In the book To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Jem Finch is an interesting character. Throughout the book he displays several qualities which make him an interesting character. These qualities include curiosity, confidence and sensitivity. Jem is also a very thoughtful young boy. Throughout this novel Jem Finch shows us many of his emotions.…
Throughout the story, as Jem grows up, he learns many life lessons as he encounters a variety of events. These lessons made him mature as a better individual gradually. One significant lesson that Jem learned as part of growing was during the encounter with Mrs Dubose. Mrs Dubose stated that Atticus was "not only a Finch waiting on tables but one in the courthouse lawing for niggers", assessing the Finch's family mental hygiene and insulting Atticus, which caused Jem to be infuriated. Although Atticus had instructed him to "take it easy" and "hold [his] head high and be a gentlemen" without making Mrs Dubose mad, Jem "cut the tops off every camellia bush Mrs Dubose owned, until the grown was littered with green buds and leaves".…
To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee is a story of racial prejudice and social class set in a time when such narrow-mindedness was considered acceptable and apart of every day life in the small town of Maycomb, Alabama. Narrated and based around Scout (Jean Louise) Finch and the many ordeals she and her brother (Jem) face in the years of their growing up; out of the childhood innocence they once possessed to realise the true evils of their community and shed false pretences surrounding the innocence of two such characters as Boo Radley and Tom Robinson for which the community of Maycomb had long labelled and ridiculed for either their colour or peculiar behavioural patterns. Lee incorporates several different symbols within the text that assist in developing the ideas and beliefs held by both Scout and Jem such as; the Mockingbird, Mrs Dubose’ Camellias and Mayella Ewell’s red Geraniums all of which play important roles on the children’s conscience and sense of justice.…