Grow Up Kid in In To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

657 Words2 Pages

Your kid just does not get it, he is in middle school but acts like a preschooler. He looks like a young man and has started to shave, but he acts like your sisters eight year old. There are always certain stages of childhood that transform children to adults. In To Kill a Mockingbird (TKM) by Harper Lee, during the 1930’s in a fictional town of Maycomb, readers are faced with two young children struggling their way to adulthood. Throughout TKM Scout, a girl of six years old, and Jem, a boy entering the fifth grade, hint to mental transformations in the way the two of them think and act. The two little troublemakers start to see how their decisions effect those around them prompting Jem and Scout to see what it really means to grow up and not grow older. The transformation from childhood to adulthood is a rugged road of change and choices that form put together adults.
The evident changes of Jem and Scout in TKM show how they are beginning to think like adults. One of three core aspects to adulthood is maturity. When we first encounter Jem and Scout in TKM the mystery of Boo Radley intrigues Jem, Scout, and Dill, they devise a plan to draw him out of Boo’s house. In their immaturity the three of them develop the idea of re-enacting the life of Boo to keep the interest and mystery of Boo alive. The game of re-enacting the troubles of Boo is an immature, childish game to play. At the end of the book Scout demonstrates her maturity to Boo Radley of all people. “Over the course of the novel she learns to act in a more adult way, even a more ladylike way, and to see the people around her as actual human beings,” (Shmoop). Scout takes the part of a woman allowing Boo to walk her to his house for the night. Scout understands her role as ...

... middle of paper ...

...llenges that mold them into mature, wise, and self-controlled adults. In TKM, readers move through the process of growing up with Jem and Scout throughout the book. Jem experiences a change of thinking and gains understanding of human nature Scout learns how to control her anger and mature into the young lady she is supposed to be. Coming of age is a natural process all adults go through; not all adults know the purpose of this process, therefore, they do not learn. The move from childhood to adulthood is a tough and uneasy time of challenges that every child must conquer in order to become an adult as demonstrated in TKM.

Work Cited
Lee, Harper. To Kill A Mockingbird. New York: Grand Central Publishing, 1960. Print.
MuditJ, . "The Coming of Age of Jeremy Finch: To Kill a Mockingbird." StudyMode. Mar 2011.
"To Kill a Mockingbird Genre." Shmoop. Web. 9 Apr 2014.

Open Document