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How Does Scout's Character Change

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Honestly in the novel To Kill a Mockingbird each one of the characters changed in a certain matter throughout the entire book. All because of the experiences they 've all been through and the natural maturing that occurred in each one of the. However Scout’s character develops more in various ways in matter of time when she attends her aunt Alexandra’s dinner party, the moment when her father Atticus gives her advice on how the behaviour of the other folks and when she gets the opportunity to stand on Arthur ‘Boo’ Radley’s porch. To begin, Scout’s character starts to develop when she joins her Aunt Alexandra and the rest of the women at her dinner party regardless how much she looked down at her aunt and how much she despised wearing dresses …show more content…

Finally, this novel demonstrates how Scout’s character develops in various ways once she gets the chance to stand on Radley’s porch because she sees the world from his perspective due to why he disclosed himself from everyone else. As she stands there she also comes to understand that Boo was not the ghout that she and Jem have assumed from the very start and she certainly couldn’t believe that he saved her life. Besides she now gets to understand what her father meant by ‘you can 't understand a person until you consider things from his point of view...until you climb into his skin and walk around in it’ (page 39) The understanding Scout has finally had of the way people are perceived and the way they actually are. It shows that she has learnt what many people in their life never learn which is to have empathy for others. This then puts Scout, still a child really, in a position where she is much wiser than many of the residents of Maycomb who did not put themselves in any of the ‘Mockingbirds’ shoes during the course of events of the story. She quotes‘ just standing on the Radley porch was enough’(page)If, for example, the white community had honestly put themselves in Tom Robinson’s shoes he would have been found not guilty or at least he may have had more hope for the appeal and not tried to escape from the jail. If they had stepped in Mayella’s shoes they may have found that Bob Ewell was really the guilty one, or that her evidence really can’t be used at all against

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