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Examples Of Judgement In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Judgement is the ability to stick an insult to a person without putting any effort into getting to know them. When judging someone, the insult given to them is most likely false and that tends to make themselves feel like an absolute abomination to society. In To Kill a Mockingbird, an American classic by Harper Lee, Scout introduces the past events leading up to her brother Jem’s handicapped arm. As the novel progresses, Scout learns about a mysterious man who indirectly teaches her, through past experiences, to not judge someone based off of personal opinions. Before Scout learned to not judge people on impulse, she was an immature child who would believe anything anyone told her. At one point in the novel, Jem told Scout and Dill a gory …show more content…

Before Scout got somewhat closer to Boo, she thought of him as a “freak” like everyone else. Scout finally realized “Summer, and [Boo] watched his children’s heart break. Autumn again, and Boo’s children needed him” (Lee 279). Boo taught Scout by proving her wrong and showing her that he was kind by protecting her and Jem at all costs, even if it meant coming out of his isolated home. Scout took in his lesson and started seeing other people differently as well. Scout always saw Aunt Alexandra as a mean, cranky, and strict family member. Scout disliked her a lot because Alexandra would always stop her and Jem from doing what they wanted to do. While Alexandra was venting to Miss Maudie about Atticus, “Aunt Alexandra rose and smoothed the various whalebone belt and wiped her nose. She patted her hair and said, ‘Do I show it?’” (Lee 237). After Atticus lost the case, Alexandra finally shows her sympathetic side, but hides it in order to seem strong. This was a side of Alexandra that Scout had not seen before until she started to listen to Alexandra’s problems. Scout came to a realization that Alexandra may have been crabby, but she was an empowering woman who tried to do anything she could to protect her family, even in times of hardship. Scout now saw the bigger picture, something she could not have seen before Boo taught

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