Saturday, November 14, 2009

Can someone review my esay on to kill a mocking bird still have to finish conclusion?

The Life and Times of the Finches’





Jem, Scout and Dill the children of Maycomb county, start their first steps into adulthood in a mentally and physically way. As they do, they change from the young, naïve children to mature young adults. Jem, Scout and Dill, who are caught in the strenuous town of maycomb, find themselves in various situations. This town throws a lot of challenges their way that tests them mentally. Still they manage to grow up and blend in. They also get to meet many people they like and dislike. As Jem, and Dill, and Scout progress with their lives, their views on race change, their outlook on life changes, and they change as well. They see the entire town as they would have never seen it before.


As the story goes on Jem and Scout realize that since they are white they get special privileges that black people do not. Scout sees that black people are not treated equally. When Tom Robinson is proven guilty even when the evidence is with him. Yet, she does not follow what other people do or think. She treats black people the same way she would treat anybody. Jem also does not care for race, when he says to Scout to not bother with the socities of the black folk. He may often show that he does, but he does not. As Jem grows older though he does start caring a bit, dill on the other hand could not care less about how black or white people are so different, when he ever saw any racism he did not understand or care. So their views on race remain like a child’s not caring for the worries’ of the adult world.


Jem, Scout and Dill’s outlook on life changes when they find out that Atticus is defending a black person who is accused of having raped a white woman. During all the pressure that is being thrown at Jem and Scout, they still manage to keep a cool head. Well, except for Jem who can lose his head in certain situations when Jem tore Mrs. Dubose’s flowers “He did not calm down until he cut the tops of every Camellia bush Mrs. Dubose owned”!(103) They find that by being Atticus’s children it can be very hard to go anywhere and not hear, “Scout Finch’s daddy defends *******.”(76) This really makes Scout angry, especially when another kid from her school says it. So the kids have a lot of tough times going on in their life.


Jem, Scout, and Dill change very much during the story. Jem becomes of age he starts growing chest hair and starts to help out Atticus with his problems, Scouts starts to get things about the adult world she starts noticing the evils of the worlds like the Ewells, and Dill starts to act of age as well because she gives up t the taunting of Aunt Alexandra and Jem. The first change in Jem is in Chapter 12 when he tells Scout to start acting like a lady. He also tells her (not in Chapter 12) to stop bothering Atticus. Jem also take notice in how his body is changing as well, body hair and he grows taller. Scout changes throughout the story, though not a lot. She at first does not like the fact that Jem keeps telling her to act like a lady, but start to experiment by wearing dresses and such. She also grows more mature throughout the story as well, when scout starts to see the world from someone else’s shoes. Dill does not really change much except by acting more of age. He stops crying over situations. Jem, Scout, and Dill really change over the course of the story.

Can someone review my esay on to kill a mocking bird still have to finish conclusion?
So what is the question?


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