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    Boo Radley Journal

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    and Dill. Right now in the novel the children are trying to bring out the legendary Boo Radley. In this journal I will be predicting and characterizing the Ewells. As I am reading the first few chapters of To Kill a Mockingbird I predict the children will not meet Boo Radley. One reason I think the kids will not meet Boo is he is locked up in his home away from the living world. First off‚ the kids never see Boo but have heard many stories about him and his wicked ways. Jem believes he is chained

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    Boo Radley Analysis

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    think that the mockingbird represents Boo radley.The symbol of the mockingbird supports the theme people often distrust what they do not understand. The don’t trust him because he never helps in town and never hangs out and talks with people. Boo Radley is a good person and helps the community in so little of ways that they are generally not noticed.By like when Jems pants got hung on his fence he was to scared to go back and get them.And when jem left Boo took them off and mended them back

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    Boo Radley Conflicts

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    teacher)‚ Boo Bradley (her neighbor)‚ and Dill and Miss Maudie (her friends). Harper Lee uses the characters and their conflicts to illustrate the themes of the book. One of the first conflicts told is between Arthur “BooRadley and his father Mr. Radley. This conflict started when Boo was a teenager and was charged with disorderly conduct‚ disturbing the peace‚ and assault and battery. The judge wanted to send Boo to a state industrial school‚ but Mr Radley refused. Instead‚ he locked Boo in the

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    Analysis Of Boo Radley

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    impossible to get rid of it. In the case of Jean-Louise “Scout” Finch‚ the parasitic idea is Boo Radley. Her journey had begun when Dill‚ a young boy of similar age arrives in her small town Maycomb County. He initiates her own obsession with revealing the truth about Arthur “BooRadley. Initially‚ the Radley setting was a place where “...[the] pecans would kill you. A baseball hit into the Radley yard was a lost ball and no questions asked” (Lee 10). The Radley’s were known as people with

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    Boo Radley Realization

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    the world. She goes from judging Boo Radley‚ to realising he was not what everyone thought. Then she began to understand she should not base her thoughts on someone purely off what others have told her. In Harper Lee’s‚ To Kill A Mockingbird‚ the moment which had the greatest effect on Scout’s life is when she realized Boo Radley saved her life‚ because she understood judging Boo before she met him was the incorrect thing to do. For a majority of the book Scout was told Boo Radley was a crazy‚ antisocial

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    Boo Radley Evil

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    that it focuses on the trial‚ but the book’s real main theme is how Scout grows up into a mature and decorous young woman from innocent child. Nothing in the novel is a better symbol of her development than Boo Radley’s character and how she views him. At the beginning of the book‚ Scout’s opinion on Boo Radley’s image and character is shrouded by myths and rumors that she hears from adults and children alike. He is like the not real monster in Scout’s closet. However‚ when she begins to see the ugly

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    Boo Radley Trial

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    In To Kill a Mockingbird‚ by Harper Lee‚ The Finch children Scout and Jem are curious about the many rumors they have heard of the “monster” Boo Radley‚ a local man who is very much a hermit‚ and decides to take it upon themselves to figure out what the real mystery is with the help of their friend Dill. Meanwhile‚ their father Atticus‚ who is a lawyer‚ takes on a case to defend a black man whose name is Tom Robinson‚ who has been accused of rape of a young white women. Due to the time period‚ Atticus

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    Boo Radley Discrimination

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    of Maycomb‚ Alabama. Tom Robinson‚ Boo Radley and Atticus Finch are victims of prejudice of their small town. These people are being discriminated and segregated from the community. These characters are seen as Mockingbird figures in their community because they are “killed” without a reason. Even if a person is innocent‚ they can still be found guilty if there is prejudice similar to the case

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    Boo Radley Symbolism

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    The symbolism of the mockingbird relates to Boo Radley because he is of an innocent nature. Such as‚ the mockingbird which does not feast on things that it shouldn’t neither does it nest where it does not belong. Instead‚ all it does is create marvelous music for people to enjoy. Similarly‚ as the mockingbird is of an innocent nature so is Boo Radley because he never wished harm to befall anyone. In fact‚ his only act of violence was accidental. Yet people found it in their hearts to accuse him of

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    Boo Radley Innocence

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    The theme of to kill a mockingbird is the destruction of innocence through the conflict of good and evil. Many people including Jem‚ Tom Robinson and Boo Radley loss their innocence in the events of this book. Jem had a true loss of innocence when Tom Robinson’s trial had ended and he realized Tom wasn’t going to be cleared of the false charges. Jem thought justice would prevail over personal bias and discrimination. When it didn’t however he was confused how people could just stand by and let this

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