Themes of Courage, Prejudice, and Maturity in Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird

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In Harper Lee’s historical fiction novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, Atticus shows the children that Maycomb is prejudice, teaches them courage, and the children show maturity. Scout and Jem are children of Atticus who's assigned to defend Tom Robinson is his case and throughout this case Scout’s summer neighbor and friend, Dill, Jem, Atticus, and Scout exuberate of these themes in their actions .Prejudice is when one pre-judges another based on their race, gender, age, or sexuality which one don’t understand and one hates the unknown of another. Courage is doing something without the fear of being judged or fearing the unknown. Maturity is learning lessons and applying them to oneself where one start to display adult characteristics. These themes of courage, prejudice, and maturity come and go through the novel. Courage is displayed through the actions of Dill and Atticus. “‘You can’t run three hundred miles without your mother knowin’” (Lee 188). Dill runs away from his new foster parents because he feels that his foster parents didn’t care, need, nor want him. Dill couldn...

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