In the novel, “To Kill a Mockingbird”, by Harper Lee, the character Jean Louise Finch, also known as Scout, is from a mature perspective looking back at her childhood. This novel is considered touching by many, and the novel takes place in the summer of nineteen thirty-three. Readers meet the characters Scout Finch and her brother Jem who lived in a fictional town in Alabama called Maycomb. During this time in the south, there was a lot of segregation between whites and blacks, and because of this, black people did not get the same fair treatment as whites did. The author includes a trial in the book for a black man named Tom Robinson who a reader can assume was falsely accused of raping a white woman named …show more content…
From the beginning it is apparent Scout, and Atticus have a close connection with each other. Because Scout is curious to the whole meaning of her suffering for her dad to fight for a case that is going to lose, he shares a few words of wisdom. Atticus tells Scout that she should keep trying, because it is worth the bestow of justice. As time goes on, Scout learns about what is happening around the World, and her teacher talks about the Holocaust, and how there is nothing prejudice in America. Afterwards Scout overheard her teacher, Miss Gates say, “…It’s time somebody taught `em a lesson, they were getting way above themselves, an’ the next thing they think they can do is marry us (Lee 283).” Immediately after Scout sees the hypocrisy on how she says there is equality in America. Scout thinks that Miss Gates does not realize that there is inequality for blacks in Maycomb. Scout soon is able to see what Atticus was saying when he was talking about what is right. In addition to, the trial is what brought Scout to understand the idea of the definition of equality and justice. Tom Robinson was sentenced guilty for a crime one could assume he did not commit, Scout could truly fully understand what Atticus really meant when he was explaining power and equality. Scout is at a full transformation because of truly gaining the wisdom of