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To Kill A Mockingbird Empathy Analysis

Decent Essays

To Kill A Mockingbird
Joni Smith
Grade 9
One of the most important themes in this powerful text is that of empathy and understanding. Maycomb, as is shown in the text, is a society that is clearly split through class, race and numerous other distinctions. In such an environment of inequality, Atticus teaches his children the importance and value of empathy, and of trying to see the world through the eyes of other people.

In the novel “To Kill A Mockingbird” by Harper Lee, learning to “walk about in someone’s skin” or feeling empathy and understanding their point of view is the main theme. Particularly as two of the main protagonist Jem and Scout learn to do this as they grow up throughout the book along with the reader. Atticus, the …show more content…

He also defends Walter when Scout wants to fight him. Scout says, “I stomped at him to chase him away, but Jem put out his hand and stopped me.”
By also having a sense of initiative and good morals, Jem knows to invite Walter back to the house with them for dinner to apologise and show courtesy towards him. Also, Jem knows that Walter will have no dinner that day and that the Cunninghams would not accept anything they couldn’t pay back. He also knows that his family couldn’t afford to eat as well as the Finches. By empathising with Walter, he sees how hungry he must be so invites him to eat with them.
Finally Scout, empathises with Boo Radley by the end of the novel. Even before Boo Radley saves them, Scout begins feeling guilty about the way they had treated Boo Radley in the past summers: “I sometimes felt a twinge of remorse when passing by old Radley place, at ever having taken part in what must have been sheer torment to Arthur Radley - what reasonable recluse wants children peeping in through his shutters, delivering greeting at the end of a fishing pole, wandering in his collards at night.” She understands how Boo Radley feels. After being rescued, she begins to start emphasising with Boo

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