Examples Of Misunderstanding In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Prejudice and misunderstanding is all around us, even in our world today, and it happened in Maycomb county too. In “To Kill A MockingBird”, by Harper Lee the main concept is how the characters survive through the great depression, racism, prejudice, and many other complications. The main character, Scout Finch, lives with her dad and brother as they fight for their believes. The setting of the novel is in Maycomb county during the great depression. Also, there is extreme prejudice toward Boo Radley with the reputation they all believed, not wanting to be with his family, and that he did not do anything to help others.
Boo Radley is judged by the people of Maycomb because of his false reputation. They all think Boo is a bad person and is dangerous. For
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He first fights for their safety against Bob Ewell. “There were four people under the tree” (352), Jem, Scout, Mr. Ewell, and Boo. This is important to the story because without it everyone in Maycomb would still believe he never comes out of his house and is a bad person. He saved Jem’s life by bringing him home to Atticus. “I saw him carrying Jem away” (352) Scout says. This suggests that Scout knows he saved Jem but no one else believes he would do such. Then, he was believed to have killed Bob Ewell after the fight. “Bob Ewell’s layin’ on the ground under the tree down yonder with a kitchen knife stuck up under his ribs. He’s dead, Mr. Finch” (357) This is an example of how Boo possibly saved them from ever being attacked by Mr. Ewell ever again. To conclude, he saved the children from any other harm with Bob.
All in all, most people believed Boo Radley was a scary monster, or just another Radley, or that he was always putting others in danger. In the end of the novel he proved Maycomb Country wrong and showed his best qualities to them. He was not the monster they had all made him out to