Friday, October 25, 2019
How does Scout develop and mature as the novel progresses? Essay
How does Scout develop and mature as the novel progresses?    Atticus says, "Scout , you're not old enough to understand some things yet"    Scout Finch, who is a six-year-old girl at the beginning of the novel  To Kill a Mocking Bird, is nine by the end of it. The novel, written  by Harper Lee, is written in a very adult style because Scout is  recounting memories of her childhood in Maycomb County, Southern  Alabama. Scout is a very lively, intelligent girl but has a hot  temper, which gets her into a lot of trouble with the adults. Unlike  the typical late nineteenth century American female stereotype, of a  woman staying home sitting on the porch while the man of the house  goes and earns the money, Scout enjoys taking part in boyish  activities with her older brother, Jem, but when she starts school,  she does not just take part in the curricular activities, but also  begins to learn about life and the way her society works. There are  many events in the story that contribute to Scout's learning  experiences, such as fights with Walter Cunningham, reading to Mrs  Dubose, going to church with Calpurnia, the outcome of the Tom  Robinson trial, and meeting social outcasts like Boo Radley and  Dolphus Raymond.    The story is set in the 1930s, where there is racial segregation in  Alabama as a result of the American Civil War and the economy is  corrupt due to the Wall Street crash (this was known as the Great  Depression). At the time that the book was written, in the 1960s, men  like Martin Luther King and Malcolm X were fighting in the Civil  Rights Movement for racial equality in the United States. All of these  factors affect the main themes of the novel and the events that occur  within it.    Pride is an important aspect o...              ...ause they could not explain him, they feared  him. This is similar to the situation Scout found herself in with  Dolphus Raymond. He was a white man who married a black woman and  fathered mixed race children. This was deemed unacceptable behaviour  by Maycomb standards and therefore Dolphus pretended to be a drunk. In  that way the people of Maycomb had an excuse for him marrying a black  woman. Scout only realises why he pretends to be drunk when she finds  out that he just sips Coca-Cola all day. She then starts to feel some  sympathy for the people who are victims of racial and social  prejudice.    After learning about Boo Radley and Dolphus Raymond, Scout learns not  to believe everything she hears.    All of these factors have, in their own way, influenced the  development of Scout's ethics and have shown how they affect her,  along with how she reacts to them.                      
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