Scout's Vision In To Kill A Mockingbird

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As one grows up, they gain new knowledge and new sight on things. This causes their vision, or understanding of the way the world works, to change. Harper Lee shows the change in vision through the eyes of a young girl, Scout, in her world-famous book, To Kill a Mockingbird. By using a child’s point of view, Lee is able to embed prejudice’s roots, effects, and solutions into the changing visions. By the end of the book, Scout learns not to underestimate one based on age from Atticus,that not everything is fair through Ms. Gates and the trial, and the difference between stories of Ms. Dubose and Boo Radley and reality.
Scout learns that age doesn’t define what you can when her vision of her father changes. Scout has only known Atticus, her …show more content…

In the beginning of the book, the young girl believes that if one does something wrong, they get punished of it. But if you did not do anything, then nothing happens to them. For example, when Scout criticized Walter Cunningham’s eating habits, and she got punished for being rude by Calpurnia. Since Walter didn’t do anything wrong, he was not punished. One of the first acts of unfairness Scout witness was when Miss Caroline said, “‘Jean Louise Finch, I’ve had about enough of you this morning. Hold out your hand.’ [Then] Miss Caroline picked up her ruler, gave [her] a half dozen little pats, then told [Scout] to stand in the corner” (Lee 28). Before this, Scout was trying to help Walter Cunningham and explain to the teacher Walter’s money situation. Scout did not do anything wrong when Miss Caroline decided to whip her. She is punished wrongly by the teacher which brought a some sense of unfairness to Scout. From chapter sixteen to twenty-one, Harper Lee describes the Tom Robinson case which really opens Scout’s eye to the prejudice that causes injustice in her small town of Maycomb. As the first testimony goes on, Scout thinks that “Mr. Ewell could have beaten up Mayella, [but Tom] could easily done it,[too]” (Lee 238). She believes that whoever did the deed will be punished and the innocent will not get in trouble. Eventually it becomes clear to Scout that Tom Robinson is innocent and Mr. Ewell and Mayella should be punished. But then the polls come in as “‘Guilty...guilty...guilty...guilty…’” (Lee 282). Harper Lee describes this scene as a “dream-like quality” not only to show emphasize the prolonged wait for the polls and Scout’s weariness, but also to reveal the impracticality that Scout perceives of how prejudiced her town is for convicting an innocent black man of rape. With a new knowledge of prejudice, Scout identifies

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