The Depression was a very rough and brutal period of the 1930's. In the novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, the reader finds out how the depression look liked in Southern America. Along with that, the true effects, of this ruthless period of time, on the local citizens are described. One of the main characters, and also the narrator of the novel, is a young girl named Jean-Louise Finch, or Scout. Through other characters such as Atticus, Jem, and Boo Radley, a profound difference in Scout's journey from innocence to maturity is seen.…
The key coming of age scene I am going to analyze is when Atticus shoots the mad dog in the street. I thought that this scene uses imagery, point of view, and conflict to make the coming of age of Jem when he realizes that he shouldn’t judge people for what they look like or act.…
I chose chapters two through three in the book To Kill A Mockingbird as a Coming Of Age scene.…
In the book “To Kill a Mockingbird” there are many lessons and themes. One of the best themes is how Scout and Jem mature. They start to see that the world around them isn’t all sweet and kind. The see that there is bad in the world and that sometimes the guy who did the right thing is wrong. That is a theme of the story, how Scout and Jem change from a child’s perspective and go to an adult perspective.…
Firstly at the beginning of the novel scout and Jem are childish and play childish games.…
For some people, maturing can be a hard concept. It takes a level of focus to become mature and to be capable of going through things that eare hard to overcome. In the book To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, Scout shows that she is capable of becoming mature and overcoming everything that she faces. Over the book Scout faces being bullied because of her dad defending an African American person, going through the trial and losing, and almost getting killed by Bob. Also she faced something that she has been wondering about for her whole life. Scout's maturity progresses, therefore she becomes more of an understanding civilian and is able to better understand the amount of racism in Maycomb.…
Overtime Scout and Jem both learn how to love people. On page 22 Scout says, "Neighbors bring food with death and flowers with sickness and little things in between. Boo was our neighbor. He gave us two soap dolls, a broken watch and chain, a pair of good-luck pennies, and our lives. But neighbors give in return. We never put back into the tree what we took out of it: we had given him nothing, and it made me sad.”(Lee, 2) This quote is in the beginning of the book when they both judged Boo Radely. After he gave them all of these wonderful items they finally start to realize he is a compassionate man. He is beyond lonely and just wants someone to accept him for who he is, not what others see him as. “One time Atticus said you never really knew a man until you stood in his shoes and walked around in them; just standin ' on the Radely porch was enough. The summer that had begun so long ago had ended, and another summer had taken its place, and a fall, and Boo Radely had come out. Said Scout.”(Lee, 40). Scout is talking about how as she grew older she finally starts to realize what it really means to show others what it means to care. It also shows that she is learning to accept a man who is known to be erotic. On the last few pages of the novel, Boo and Scout are walking home. It states “I started to see another life through Boo’s eyes. This quote is beyond important for how the children mature throughout the story. It took Scout’s brother Jem to get hurt for her to finally realize it’s time to wake up and learn to not take things for…
Can you remember a time when you realized growing up had a lot of of ups and downs? In To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, a young boy named Jem discovers this through his own unique experiences. At the beginning of the novel, Jem is innocent and naive while he is obsessing over his scary and mysterious neighbor, Boo Radley. As time goes on, Jem grows up enough to realize that Boo isn’t so scary and mysterious, and that other assumptions that he made similar to that one, such as those about Tom Robinson’s trial and growing up alongside his little sister, Scout, were also untrue. Throughout the story, he is growing up and experiencing many bumps along the way. We learn through Jem that growing up had both advantages and disadvantages.…
"You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view, until you climb into his skin and walk around in it" (Lee 20). What coming of age is all about is never judging a book by its cover. In the book To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee one of the main themes in the story is coming of age which is symbolized it by Jem, Scout, and Miss. Maudie’s cakes.…
We all grow up after a while. It’s just a part of life and maturing. This book is all about kids maturing and learning life lessons to learn more of the world and the way society works. They find it hard at first and don’t understand certain things and why people act the way they do. Sometimes, they will go to investigate something they saw and that can either give them clarity or give them more questions. A lot of the time these investigations have consequences as well but I guess that’s how kids learn what is good and what isn’t.…
In the book in the and the movie To Kill a Mockingbird there a many scenes that represent A “Coming of Age Experience”. Jem and Scout both have a “Coming of age Experience” when their father has to defend a black man named Tom Robinson and Tom is found guilty. They learn that the world may sometimes be unfair and that the world that they live in is racist. In this essay I will be going over the courthouse scene described to you in the passage above showing a “Coming of Age Experience”.…
In conclusion, the literary elements that were used to identify childlike innocence were the use of metaphors, characters, and morals. Innocence was once found in everyone, but some people lose it while they grow up. Being exposed to hatred, racism, and unfairness can cause one to leave their innocence behind, grow up, and see the true realities of the real world. Thought Jem was impacted harshly of the realities, Scout is still far too young to understand everything that has happened.…
When the story begins, there are two siblings named Scout and Jem. They are fairly new to life, and consequently, they are convinced that everything and everyone is inherently good. Early in her childhood, Scout says, “I would…
This quote is in the beginning of the book, after the dedication. Charles Lamb was a children’s author and essayist. The quote shows one of the focuses in the book is, lawyers, and the other being children. In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, written by Harper Lee, as the characters of the novel progress from childhood to adulthood, they are exposed to more things that they may not have been able to understand before, gain maturity and knowledge and also lose their innocence and let go of their childhood.…
Growing up is an inevitable stage of life that all experience as they age. Maturing perceptually is not a given but a process that a person progresses through as they gain experience and build solid beliefs on certain topics and things. Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird is a well-known novel that describes life in the tired town of 1930 Maycomb, Alabama. It touches upon themes such as morality, prejudice and youth, the latter being one of the more major subjects in the text. Before growing up, one must go through a learning procedure, which Lee’s characters demonstrate regularly.…