Saturday, March 14, 2020
To Kill A Mocking Bird- Full grade 9 BR essays
To Kill A Mocking Bird- Full grade 9 BR essays Harper Lee choose the setting as an imaginary (May comb) county in Alabama during the 1930s. She set the story during this time because it was a time of social turbulence, and a time when Americans began to start thinking about more modern social issues. This was the perfect setting in which to create a theme that illustrates the injustices of prejudice, intolerance, and quick judgments of others. Harper Lee chose to tell the book from the eyes of Scout, because Scouts innocence and young age allow her to have a pure, untainted view on any event that takes place. In general, Scout observes, but has no preconception of the events that develop. For a child, it is easier to see the shades of gray of someone's character. A child cannot see someones age or gender etc... as a cause for their problems or shortcomings. The first character to be judged swiftly and wrongly is the Finchs neighbor Boo Radley. Boo is introduced as a hermit that lives shut up in his house, completely isolated from the outside world. Dill, Jem, and Scout spend most of their free time either ridiculing Boo or trying to lure him out of his house. By using the childrens innocent fear of the unknown, Harper Lee succeeds in demonstrating the basis of all prejudice. In the end, the Finchs bizarre neighbor becomes a hero and saves the children from almost certain death. While the children imagined and concluded Boo was a monster of some sort, he ends up saving the children of whom he knows almost nothing about.This part also brings about a decision where abiding by the law would be an injustice. Harper Lee introduces and portrays Bob Ewell as a villainous and evil man, but she creates Bob in this way to illustrate how judgment is too quickly made. Harper Lee begins to unfolds the root of Bobs anger. She also illustrates the sordid and destitute conditions the Ewells live in. Poor, ...
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