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A Change Of Shoes In To Kill A Mockingbird

Decent Essays

A Change of Shoes, a Change in Perspective The best way to understand someone is to walk around in their shoes and look at situations in their point of view. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is the journey of Jean Louise Finch childhood. She gains knowledge and experience in her community and in the “real” world with the help of Atticus. Standing in another person’s shoes is only one of the many things she experienced. To Kill a Mockingbird is written in Scout’s point of view, and if it was written in any other, the structure of the story would change. Although Scout’s perspective is naïve, however, she matured and her perspective changed throughout the book, making the readers interpret the book differently than in the beginning. Judgement …show more content…

Dubose was a morphine addict who lived across the street from the Finch’s house. Jem does not like her because she always yells rude insults to Jem and Scout. Jem cut up the flowers in her front yard, and as a result, he had to read to Mrs. Dubose every day. “She had her own views about things, a lot different from mine, maybe…I wanted you to see something about her. I wanted you to see what real courage is, instead of getting the idea that courage is a man with a gun in his hand” (112). At first, Jem complained about it, but Atticus gives Jem and Scout a lesson to stand in her shoes and see the situation in her perspective. Mrs. Dubose is an old lady and is very alone at times, but by reading to her every day, it helps her with the addiction she …show more content…

Scout started off as a quick-tempered, witty girl, but towards the end she gradually matured and shaped herself into a young lady. “Atticus was right. One time he said you never really knew a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them. Just standing on the Radley porch was enough” (279). She was given a lesson from Atticus to not assume about other people, but to see in their point of view, and by this quote, Scout understands her lesson and looked in Boo Radley’s point of view. By standing on his porch, she could “see” what Boo sees: a community, but he was too scared to rejoin it. She did not know Boo so she only assumed things about him, but after walking him to his porch, she sees something different about him. Scout understood this because she know Boo Radley most of the time locks himself and shuts himself out. Scout learns many lessons throughout the book, but most importantly, perspective was the main

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