I looked up, listening to the steady beat of my pull chains hit against each other. The moonlight was piercing through the window, creating a light reflecting upon my mirror, shooting back at me. “Who am I?” I wondered why I chose to be the boy with the smile. As I looked at my reflection I see someone wanting to know the truth, the truth of humanity’s morality. I strive to know. I knew I wanted to make others happy, however I didn’t know why. My morals were all shaken, creating an undesirable feeling of contempt. “Who decided why I should always put other’s needs before my own? How did I create these kinds of morals?” Then, out of the corner of my eye, I see a book. To Kill A Mockingbird was on my desk, and I realized something. To Kill A …show more content…
Thinking back on the character of Mrs. Merriweather, I realized her different perspective on African Americans. In the 1930s (when this book is set), white people were condescending against African Americans. Most of them were anyways, as there were always people who treated African Americans with the respect they deserve. Anyways, Merriweather is just a regular woman in Maycomb, Alabama, and she has her own set of beliefs. She mostly thought that African Americans shouldn’t be rude to any white person, as she gets annoyed at her own maid, (Insert Name). (Insert Quote). This creates an uneasy feeling in the stomach, which automatically creates Merriweather a dislikable character. Looking at the surface, Merriweather was just a rude lady who was over sharing her thoughts, but actually she was a [insert adjective here]. Most people in the 1930s had the same exact principles as Merriweather had, which prompts the question of majority versus minority. Atticus supported African Americans, and even goes so far to protecting them in a court of law. However, a staggering amount of the community had a negative perspective on African Americans, which supported Merriweather and her beliefs. I would have never interpreted a character I disliked so much, considering she was bashing on Atticus after all, but doing so just showed me that …show more content…
Although his real name is Arthur Radley, the kids in the story have no idea who really Arthur is. Every kid in Maycomb has heard the rumors of Boo Radley and his murderous intentions, but that’s not exactly the case. Radley did not physically harm anyone at all under the ark of the story. He was actually quite the opposite, giving Jem and Scout things via the tree trunk with the hole in the middle, wrapping Scout in a blanket in winter, and even saves Jem from an assault that happens at the end of the book. In almost all of the book, the readers have no idea who “Boo Radley” is and what he’s capable of. Scout wonders why Arthur always stayed inside, and she learned about it when looking back from his house. (Insert Quote). He didn’t need anything else in life, so he always stayed indoors, letting the rumors pile up on him. Every action, every action of kindness, just proved to show who Arthur really is and what he believed was the right thing to do. He didn’t care about what anyone thought of him, he just lived in the moment deciding what’s best. One thing that struck me was that he had a neutral standing on African Americans. He didn’t downright degrade anyone in particular, but he also didn’t see the case of Tom Robinson. Arthur Radley had a perspective that most people in that time period did not or even understand to get, and it’s what made Arthur such an important
Throughout the book we watch the narrator, Scout Finch, go from a naive first grader that think Maycomb is the best place out there, to finally maturing and understanding the world around her. Throughout the book Scout is impressioned by so many people that Boo Radley is a monster that should be kept in at all times. Later we learn he isn’t, but one of the first impressions we get from him is a brute
Entry 1: I feel as though the Lord only caters to white people. I’m really shaking and I just keep shaking but I am staying strong. There was an empty cell between me and all of the other prisoners. Ms. Emma came to see me but I was quiet and just starring at the ceiling. I didn’t care about anything, nothing mattered to me. I am going to die soon anyway so what’s the point. (“What it go’n feel like”(pg. 225).
During our lives, we develop morals and values through life experiences. They can be influenced by our society and the people we surround ourselves with. In the novel To Kill A Mockingbird, Harper Lee demonstrates courage, social inequality and prejudice through the characters and events in the book. We experience life lessons through the protagonist Scout Finch as she develops her own values. This is displayed through a variety of life lessons and values throughout the novel.
A Major Role in The Novel "To Kill a Mockingbird": Boo Radley A person that was stuck behind bars for most of his life escapes and saves the lives of two innocent children. Boo Radley, whose real name is Mr. Arthur, is like a prisoner in his own home because he is afraid to face the real world. Boo Radley plays a major role in the novel "To Kill A Mockingbird" because he acts like a second father to the children. He does this by creating a strong bond with the children, he saves Jem and Scout's lives and he is like a mockingbird to the children. Boo Radley shows us how a complete stranger can become your best friend in a single moment.
In To Kill a Mockingbird, the main plot, the Tom Robinson case, parallels that of the Boo Radley subplot in many ways. In the Tom Robinson plot, Tom, a black man, gets falsely accused of savagely beating and raping Miss Mayella Ewell, a 19 year old girl who lives in poverty with her father, Bob Ewell, and her many younger siblings. Though the evidence points to Bob Ewell as the abuser, the townsfolk, including the jury, take the Ewell’s word over Tom’s purely because of his skin color. The subplot in this novel is focused on Arthur “Boo” Radley, the mysterious neighbor of the Finch family. They know very little about him, as he hasn’t left his house in many years. In the midst of the Tom Robinson case, the Boo Radley subplot trails off, almost
To Kill A Mockingbird displays an environment where one must be inhumane to another in order to become socially compatible. Maycomb has established a hierarchy where social compartmentalisation is the way of life. Men with a profession and a career are superior, while the farmers are near the bottom of the social strata and are considered inferior. No matter which remarkable qualities Negroes possess, they are always s...
But Boo tends to be a misunderstood character, just like the mockingbird. In chapter 28, when Jem and Scout were walking back home from school, they took the shortcut which happened to be pitch black. Jem heard a sound which alerted them. At first Jem thought it was Cecil Jacobs (a boy who liked to pull jokes on Jem and Scout), but then they realized it was someone else. They heard footsteps running after them to find that it was a grown man. Jem called out to Scout to run but she fell due to her costume.When Scout finally got back up to find Jem, the man squeezed her until she could barely breathe. Worriedly, Scout called out for Jem but didn’t get a response. She saw two men underneath the tree besides Jem and herself. She called out “Atticus?” but there was no answer once again. She noticed a man laying the ground that had the awful essence of booze, she got up and made her way over the road, and within the light of the street lamp Scout sees a man carrying Jem. The man headed towards the Finch house, where Atticus let him in. Scout eventually realized that “the man” was no other than Mr. Arthur or commonly referred to as Boo Radley. Mr. Arthur, despite his poor perception of
They have many misconceptions of people, places, and concerts in Maycomb county. However as they are young and don't really have opinions themselves. They abide by those presented them. At the start of the novel Scout and Jem see Mr. Arthur Radley or "Boo", as a dangerous, crazy, and rather isolated man. Although never being in his presence or in association with him they always make assumptions about him. They constantly pestered his household and played games that mocked him, "..time to play Boo's big scene...steal the scissors...Jem would fake plunge into Dill's thigh..."(LEE40).They also had the misconception that Boo was kept inside forcefully by his family. Boo was also blamed for unresolved events. As time goes by they mature and start to develop more of an understanding of Boo, "..I think I'm beginning to understand why Boo Radley's stayed shut up in his house all this time...he wants to stay inside"(LEE227). Jem develops an understanding as to why Boo Radley stays inside. It's not because his family forces him to stay inside. He realizes that when living in a town like Maycomb, there is an incredible amount of judgement and labeling that occurs. It becomes evident to him that Boo has no place and isn't welcomed into the society. Especially with having a stereotype "glued" to his identity. Scout then has an
Jill McCorkle's Ferris Beach, a contemporary novel, shares numerous characteristics with Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, a novel written in the 1960's. Like To Kill a Mockingbird, McCorkle's novel documents the life of a young girl in a small southern town. The two narrators, Kate Burns and Scout Finch, endure difficult encounters. A study of these main characters reveals the parallels and differences of the two novels. Jill McCorkle duplicates character similarities and rape from Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird to show the reader how young girls think and develop.
In 1960, a novel was written to outline injustices and racism against those who were innocent, though unfairly judged because of social expectations and prejudiced beliefs. This novel not only presented these issues, but is also considered a revolutionary piece of literature, still being read by many people today, more than 50 years later. The novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, has caused some controversy about the intents of the book and the way certain people or groups are presented. Whether To Kill a Mockingbird as a narrative outshines the issue it presents is a debatable argument. However, I believe that the narrative of the novel supports the concerns exhibited for numerous reasons. In what follows, some of these are presented: the historical
Boo Radley was a white man that no one hardly ever seen or knew. Everyone thought he was mean, and crazy. Scout narrates “As Mr.Radley passed by, Boo drove the scissors into his parents leg, pulled them out, wiped them on his pants and resumed his activities(11). The story was not true, but that’s what everyone thought of when they talked about Boo Radley. Boo Radley was actually the exact opposite of what people thought of him to be. Jem and Scout would find little things in an old tree, and they had realized that Boo Radley was the one who was leaving them things. Also when Jem pants was tangled on the fence, he left and came back to try and pry them off and they were neatly folded across the fence, untangled. Lots of people stereotyped him to be something that he’s not, which means he’s a mockingbird because he is nothing but
Black people during the time period of To Kill a Mockingbird are very often looked at as a minority, and people who do not matter at all, kind of being treated like animals. The way that they are used as slaves and have a different section for almost everything one can think of (table, courthouse, etc.) is simply absurd. There is no respect for them in To Kill a Mockingbird, and no one takes a minute to go in their shoes and realize that they are humans just like any white person. Black people are so frowned upon in this period of time that “once you have a drop of Negro blood, that makes you all black.”(Lee, ?) From what is said here, it can be inferenced that being black is something that one would never want to be, and even being associated with them would destroy one 's status in society. An evident way that negroes are looked down upon as opposed to the way that Aunt Alexandra treats and refers to them. She gets mad at Atticus because “he 's turned out a nigger-lover [and] we 'll never be able to walk the streets of Maycomb agin. He 's ruinin ' the family, that 's what he 's doin '."(Lee, ?) When she is talking about Calpurnia, as well as her feelings for her, she is very misunderstanding and distasteful to
Boo Radley, also known as Arthur Radley, is the scary, evil creature that lives in the creepy old house down the street from Jem and Scout, and is misjudged at first. Jem and Scout, two main characters, first see Boo as some sort of scary monster. Jem described him in the first chapter as “...six-and-a-half feet tall, judging from his tracks...” and said “...he dined on raw squirrels and any cats he could catch, that's why his hands were bloodstained- if you ate an animal raw, you could never wash the blood off...” Jem also mentioned Boo had a “...long jagged scar that ran across his face; what teeth he had were yellow and rotten; his eyes popped, and he drooled most of the time.” Scout and Jem also call Boo a “...malevolent phantom...” As if that isn't bad enough, the kids hear and tell horrible stories about Boo. One is of how he stabbed his dad with a pair of scissors; another tells how he was locked up in the courthouse basement. Even with such a grisly initial perception at the beginning of...
Think you know Boo Radley? Not many people do. Boo Radley is a shy, mysterious character from Harper Lee’s: To Kill a Mockingbird. Throughout the book, Boo is thought of as a monster within the book’s setting of Maycomb County. He’s also known to be mentally ill and violent due to many stories about his past. However, I believe he’s just misunderstood. Boo Radley is actually a caring and courageous human being. Examples that benefit this idea include: Boo Radley giving gifts to Scout and Jem and saving Scout and Jem from Bob Ewell. Furthermore, throughout To Kill a Mockingbird; Boo Radley is shown to be misunderstood, caring, and courageous.
In conclusion, "To Kill a Mockingbird" is a breathtaking novel that challenges the themes of prejudice, discrimination, the loss of innocence and social injustice. This novel touches these topics in ways that no other had ever before it and will remain a cultural phenomenon for years to come.