Have you ever sat down and watched a TV show or movie you used to watch when you were a child? Have you realized that you now understand different jokes and sayings that you did not necessarily get back then? As we grow up we get wiser and more educated. As we grow up we are unfortunately revealed to the parts of the world that are not all sugar and spice. As Scout grew up in the novel, she realized that the people of Maycomb County were actually struggling, she discovered the malice given towards African-Americans, and she learned the importance of not judging a book by it’s cover.
When Scout was little she just thought that being poor was as simple as that, being poor. She didn’t realize that how others saw people depended on their financial
…show more content…
In the beginning of the book, Scout did not understand that the white people strongly disliked the African-Americans. When people from her school would come up to her and tease her about Atticus defending an African-American she got offended because she didn’t know what they were insulting. As the book went on, Scout slowly started to understand most of the white people around her despised African-Americans. Scout could not comprehend why a person’s skin tone changed their rights and made them dangerous. Harper Lee’s addition of Calpurnia, the family cook, gave Scout a new level of confusion as she absolutely adored Calpurnia, there was nothing wrong with her, and if anything she was like a second mom to Scout. By the end of the court case and Tom Robinson’s death, Scout seemed to really understand the hate shown to African-Americans. Bob Ewell’s feelings about Tom’s death was, “It made one down and about two more to go”(323), which really conveyed their lack of decency towards the African-Americans. The fact it barely even registered to the citizens of Maycomb County that African-Americans were humans was enough to make Scout sick. She knew most of the African-Americans in Maycomb County were good people. She also discovered that contrary to beliefs, Boo Radley and Dolphus Raymond were good