Character Analysis Of Boo Radley A Mockingbird

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In the 1930s in the south, the Ku Klux Klan was in full swing along with the Jim Crow laws. Segregation was spreading like a wildfire all over the south. It was no different in Maycomb, Alabama. However, there were a few people that did, in fact, respect African-Americans. Those few included a man by the name of Arthur Radley. More commonly know to Maycomb as “Boo” Radley, a thief, creep, look through your windows, kill your family type of guy. However, Boo was not that type of guy at all. Boo Radley is a mockingbird. Boo Radley is a mockingbird because he protects the Finch children, he isn’t a monster but is kind and innocent, and finally because he tries to better the community, almost like a guardian angel.
Boo may have done his fair share of sketchy things; that doesn’t mean he was a bad guy, in fact, he did his best to look out for Jem and Scout Finch. Boo always was given a bad rap, but most people in Maycomb never thought ‘Maybe he’s changed, maybe, just maybe, he’s not as bad as they all say.’ There was a particular family that Boo watched out for. They may not have ever seen him, but he was always there watching out for them. Like the time when it was a really chilly night and Scout and Jem weren’t inside the house because there was a fire. Somebody put a blanket around Scout. Sure enough, that man was
See, “Mockingbirds don’t do one thing but make music for us to enjoy. They don’t eat up people’s gardens; they don’t do one thing but sing their hearts out for us. That’s why it’s a sin to kill a mockingbird.”(119) Boo fits the mold of what a mockingbird is perfectly. He didn’t want to cause any harm, he just wanted to protect the innocent from the evil. It truly would be a sin to kill him. This book helps people look for the inner mockingbird in people. Maybe that is what one of Harper Lee’s writing purposes

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