Jem And Atticus essay topics

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  • Prejudice Of Maycomb County As The Fire
    1,785 words
    11/27/98 To Kill A Mockingbird By, Harper Lee Symbolism "I'd rather you shoot at tin cans in the backyard, but I know you " ll go after birds. Shoot all the bluejays you want, if you can hit 'em, but remember it's a sin to kill a mockingbird". This is what Atticus Finch tells his children after they are given air-rifles for Christmas. Uniquely, the title of the classic novel by Harper Lee, To Kill A Mockingbird, was taken from this passage. At first glance, one may wonder why Harper Lee decided ...
  • Atticus Finch Southern Gentleman
    733 words
    Atticus Finch, a widower of 50, is the father of Jem and Scout. He represents all that is best in Maycomb as a citizen, a father, a Christian and a Southern gentleman. He stands out as a man of reason and courage. As a citizen Atticus is highly respected and very responsible. His conduct and conversation throughout the book show that he is entirely free from the usual Maycomb faults of pride, racialism and hypocrisy. In any ways, Atticus is central to the whole point of the novel. In the face of...
  • Jem And Scout
    1,756 words
    Has evil always been around, or did man create it? One could trace evil all the way back to Adam and Eve; however, evil came to them, but it was not in them. When did evil become part of a person? No one knows, but evil has been around for a long time and unfortunately is discovered by everyone. In many great classics in literature evil is at the heart or the theme of the novel, including Harper Lee's novel To Kill a Mockingbird. This classic book demonstrates the growing up of two children in t...
  • Closeness Between Jem And Scout
    874 words
    The Evolution Of Jem Finch In Harper Lee's To Kill A Mockingbird, Jeremy Finch is one of the main characters who evolves from a child to an adolescent who learns to question the many faults of his environment. As Jeremy (or Jem) grew up, he adapted to the adult world as best he could, and learned that life was not the beautiful day in the neighborhood that Jem thought it was. And in doing so, he grows a closer resemblance to his father. We meet Jem near the age of ten, with his sister Scout, and...
  • Scout's Development
    390 words
    To Kill A Mockingbird: Scout's Development " Select a novel studied by you where at least one of the principal characters isa young person. Discuss what you consider to be the most important influence in the novel in helping that young person to develop. ' Jean-Louise Finch (Scout) is the main character in Harper Lee's 'To kill a mockingbird'. She is a young girl who matures in the course of the novel. The most important influence in her development is clearly her father, Atticus. Unlike almost ...
  • Boo To Jem And Scout
    6,957 words
    Part 1 Chapter 1-81. Chapter 1 introduces readers to the town of Maycomb, , its inhabitants, and the particular attitudes of many of its people. Find a sentence or a paragraph which illustrates each of the following attitudes / ideas. Quote at least a portion of the sentence or paragraph and give page number. a. pride in ancestry and 'tradition'tired old town' - p. 9 b. pride in conformity and distrust of those who are different " Maycomb County had recently been told that it had nothing to fear...
  • Street From Jem And Scout
    1,774 words
    To Kill a Mockingbird was written by Harper Lee and was published in 1960. To Kill a Mockingbird won many awards, they are; Pulitzer Prize, 1961, Alabama Library Association award, 1961, Brotherhood Award of National Conference of Christians and Jews, 1961, Bestsellers' paperback of the year award, 1962. Harper Lee was born on the 28th day of April in 1926 in southwest, in a small town called Monroeville. Harper Lee went to Huntingdon College from 1944-45, from 1945-49 she studied law at the Uni...
  • Tom And His Children's Friends
    434 words
    To Kill a Mockingbird was one of the best book I ever read. The book mostly deals with how the main character, Atticus Finch, deals with the controversy surrounding his actions and how he tries to shelter his family from it. The main part of the book takes place at the trial. A woman named Mayella Ewell, blames a black man named Tom Robinson of rape. Its not true, but she knows she can get away with it, since the people in those days had lots of respect for white women, and black's were still tr...
  • Jem And Scout By Atticus
    596 words
    Atticus is the town's most respected lawyer. He is not wealthy, but he is well off in the community and kind towards everyone. He has been assigned a case of defending a black man accused of rape. Now he is both revered and reviled by the townspeople. After all, they do live in the south in the early 1930's. Atticus gives a lot of advice to his kids. He tells them that they cannot judge people until they "climb into their skin and walk around in it". Atticus is a prominent character throughout t...
  • Jem Finch And Charles Norstadt
    1,092 words
    Comparing To Kill a Mockingbird with The Man Without a Face "Fighting Fear and Tradition" Michael Jordan can't single-handedly win a basketball game. Wayne Gretzky can't win hockey games by himself either. It takes a team effort to be successful. That was exactly the case in Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird and The Man Without a Face. Even though the time period of To Kill a Mockingbird (1930s) and The Man Without a Face (1960s) were vastly different, everyone needed help, no matter how danger...
  • Gives Atticus The Moral Support
    1,564 words
    What kind of reasons would inspire someone to give up their time, talent, and treasure for another individual hardly known to them Why would anyone risk his or her occupation, social standing, and prestige, to stand up for a single moral belief in justice This value of individualism is extremely rare in society. Harper Lee's novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, paints a very real picture of this value in the character Atticus Finch. Atticus relinquishes his basic need to care for himself. He decides no...
  • Tom Robinson And Boo Radley
    623 words
    Boo Radley and Tom Robinson Both Boo Radley and Tom Robinson were outcasts to the society of Maycomb. Boo was locked away in his house, where Tom was a black man. Racism was very bad in the 1930's. No one wanted to be a black man's friend and if someone said he had done something wrong, he had obviously done something wrong. Like in Tom's case. Tom had been framed for rape, which he didn t do. Tom never harmed anyone (Lee, 195) Racism led to his punishment, as he was carried away from the courth...
  • Tom Throughout The Case
    606 words
    Hate in To Kill A Mocking Bird At the time it was written, To Kill a Mockingbird was looked down upon since there was so much hatred towards negroes. Few people in the United States realized the unjustified prejudice against the negro. The novel focuses on how the main character, Atticus Finch, deals with the controversy surrounding his actions and how he tries to shelter his family from it. The book's climax, where it is brought to a final solution, takes place at the trial. A woman named Mayel...
  • Mrs Dubose And The Children
    725 words
    To Kill A Mockingbird The popular yet classic novel written by Harper Lee A single, widowed father, Atticus Finch strives to raise his two children with good morals in a southern town during the 1930's. Atticus, Mrs. Dubose, and the children are the main characters in the story. They all reside in a small town by the name of Maycomb, where this story takes place. Mrs. Dubose is a sick old lady and is often criticized Jem and Scout and other children who pass the porch where she was confined. She...

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