Search 4 Free Essays:

To Kill A Mockingbird: Innocence

Below is one of our free research papers on To Kill A Mockingbird: Innocence. If the term paper below is not exactly what you're looking for, you can search our essay database for other topics.
To Kill A Mockingbird: Innocence

Anonymous

While examining the term, "the end of innocence", Scout’s viewpoint on Boo throughout the novel can be an indication of Scout’s own "end of innocence."

Scout opens the novel with a naive viewpoint on both the world and Boo Radley. At the start of the novel, Scout interprets a raiding on the jail, through an adolescent standpoint. Scout sees the circumstances of the attack from the perspective of a young child. Scout’s responses to situations, such as the one at the jail, attributes to the fact that she is young, and has few life experiences under her belt. Scout plays ludicrous games with Boo and her detachment towards reality shows the immense childishness she possesses. Boo Radley is a fictional person to Scout and her friends. Scout treats Boo like a figment of her imagination, which signifies her naïveté. Scout starts the novel with a false association between fantasy and reality.

Scout’s maturation commences when she views the injustice of Maycomb’s court system. After a jury fails to set Tom Robinson free, Scout fully understands the mechanics of prejudice when she declares, "Tom was a dead man the minute Mayella Ewell opened her mouth and screamed." Scout has never met more trouble than the trouble that occurs between children‘s own social circles. After Tom Robinson is convicted, she fully comprehends racial prejudice, and begins to understand the entire situation. Following the trail, she says, "The Radley place ceased...

Login

Join

It's completely free!
Get instant access to all our essays.

Join Now!

Submitted by: 4freeessays
Date Submitted: 12-01-2007
Category: Novels
Words: 575
Pages: 2.3