Jean Louise (Scout) is the Narrator in To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, we see the whole story from her eyes. The book starts off with Scout as a six year old girl who is going into the 1sr grade. By the end of the novel she is in third grade and eight years old. With age comes maturity and Scout is a perfect example of how a character can mature over time. Scouts age affects the way she views the world around her and her understanding of what is normal.
“ you never really understand someone until you consider things from their point of view.” (lee 36) While standing on the front porch of the radley's place scout reflects on the past two year’s, from arthur's point of view, she finally understands what atticus taught her in chapter three. In to kill a mockingbird scout begins to mature in a way, this does not even begin to occur until the end of the story in chapter 31. Scout is young 9 years to be exact , but she is starting to pick up things here and there on little life lessons atticus has taught her. An example of this is when scout is asked by arthur to walk him home, but she wants to be respectful, she takes him home arm in arm as if he were being a gentleman.
Jean Louise Finch (Scout), is the narrator and protagonist of the novel, To Kill a Mockingbird. She is a significant character in the book, and without her, the story would not be the same. Scouts faith is tested when she is forced to deal with the prejudice people that surround her. Throughout the novel, she develops a mature nature and learns to appreciate human goodness without ignoring human evil. “I think there's just one kind of folks.
To Kill a Mockingbird When you’re a kid, everything you encounter, makes you curious. Especially the stories you get told. It’s difficult to understand that someone is not always a story another person tells. Scout learns this lesson in Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird.
Readers look to Scout as a test to character and innocence. As Scout is only six years old in the beginning of the novel, she is unaware of the surrounding bigotry in her town, Maycomb. Unlike many of the characters in the novel, she is able to look at the world in a unique perspective due to her innocence and influence from her activist father, Atticus
Scout Finch, a once disorderly girl, changes a lot when her father, Atticus, takes the responsibility of defending a black man. Scout matures quickly when she is faced with discrimination and hatred towards her father. The atmosphere of discrimination in the novel To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee affects Scout, by creating a hostile environment that teaches her important lessons, forcing Scout to protect herself and her father, and learning that challenging the traditional way of life was not always wrong. It must have been a confusing time for Scout Growing up in Maycomb, because once her father took the role as an attorney for a black man, everything started to change.
Scout begins with an innocent and childish view, sometimes not understanding her own thoughts because she has not seen the unfairness in Maycomb. However, throughout the book, she begins to see these horrible rules of society and slowly begins to understand society and what it expects of her and others.
World War I was a war that Americans entered reluctantly, and a war which led to the replacement of progressivism by liberalism. Liberalism arose from a feeling of entrapment brought by the various regulations on industry and society, and embraced individualism to create a sense of liberation. Cars, especially the Model T, played a massive role in this by giving mobility to men and women, and creating a sense of freedom and independence (McGerr 228). The phonograph, psychotherapy, sports, amusement parks, dance, and music were other individualistic concepts, which provided pleasure. African Americans of the period began migrating to cities like Chicago, and enjoyed certain individualistic freedoms like music and boxing (McGerr 257), but were also banned from many theaters and places of leisure, and often created their own theaters.
Think back to when you were little kid around 7 or so and you had no worries about life or anything. All you would think about is candy and toys and nothing about the world of adults. No worries of the weather or what the grown ups would talk about. Scout’s childhood innocence takes a turn from her care free days to the real world of racism and bad people. In To Kill a Mockingbird Scout witnesses the trial of Tom Robinson and how racism is taught to her unknowingly from it.
Many children have adults in their lives who influence the way they turn out in the future. These people can affect the children in negative or positive ways. Scout learns the importance of respect from Calpurnia, the ways of the world, how to live life to the fullest, and walking in someone else’s shoes to understand them throughout the entirety of To Kill a Mockingbird. Harper Lee truly portrays Scout ’s coming of age by using the character’s Calpurnia, Miss Maudie, and Atticus as very important role models in Scout’s life.
A Peregrination of Maturity throughout One’s Childhood in Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird According to a survey conducted by the Pew Research Center, “a majority of Americans (57%) say they only know some of their neighbors.” In the novel “To Kill a Mockingbird”, Scout, the main character, is a young 6-year-old girl who always heard rumors about Arthur “Boo” Radley her neighbor. She heard things like Boo was dead or Boo had stabbed his father with a pair of scissors. Scout really wanted to know her neighbor this leads to throughout the novel Scout to learns more about Boo; this then opens her eyes to a new version of Boo.
Scout is already wise beyond her years, but she continues to grow throughout a series of events in Harper Lee’s novel, To Kill A Mockingbird. The most important thing about Scout is her growth throughout events in the book. The context of To Kill A Mockingbird influenced Scout to change her identity and morality throughout her experiences with stereotypes and racism in Maycomb. The first way that Scout changed was by seeing and experiencing stereotypes in gender.
Coming of age is a process that many people learn from, as they grow older. Harper Lee’s “To Kill A Mockingbird” gives many examples of how coming of age can change one person completely. Especially when a young boy leaves his home in Meridian to go to Maycomb. Lee uses the character Dill, to introduce a subplot, to show an external conflict, and to create imagery about running away; allowing him to come of age.
Throughout life, humans go through stages of being babies, kids, and adults which are examples of coming of age. In To Kill a Mockingbird, Scout Finch goes through a process of coming of age that is reflected in her interactions with other people and the lessons she learns. Scout's improvement throughout the narrative is significant to the themes of emotion, social groups, and justice. Scout is a young, silly child at the start of the book who has no concept of her surroundings. She is not aware of the social abuses of power that occur in her neighborhood, but as she gets older, she notices what has been happening in her neighborhood.
What is coming of age? Coming of age is a process in which an individual goes through a certain event and gains new insights that allow them to mature. In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, they are many events where coming of age is revealed in the main characters. The coming of age is revealed through the author’s choice of various literary elements. One place where coming of age is shown is when Atticus tells Calpurnia, Miss Maudie, Aunt Alexandra and Scout that Tom Robinson had died, while Aunt Alexandra was having her missionary society’s meeting.