Scout Character Analysis To Kill A Mockingbird

Words: 1633
Pages: 7

Scout (Jean Louise Finch): To Kill a Mockingbird is told from Scout’s first person perspective which leads to interesting insight to the issues occurring in Maycomb. At the beginning of the story, Scout is almost a 1st grader, 4 years younger than Jem. Having been raised alongside Jem, Scout has a male-like build and is strong enough to take most people at school in a fight. Throughout the beginning of the story, she is best described in one word: tomboy. She has grown up alongside Jem and has gained characteristics similar to his despite being genetically a girl. Throughout her childhood, Scout refuses to change her ways and act like a girl. She has a ground in sense of what is right and wrong from her father and is trusting and understanding of the community where she grew up. In chapter 5, Dill asks Scout to marry her and she says yes, leading to a deeper relationship between the two. …show more content…
Sher youthful appearance makes her look much younger than she is, and she is also nearsighted because she is narrated to squint at things far away. Her role in the Finch family is to take care of the house, watch the kids, and to cook meals. Through this she has become an essential part of the family, and is recognized as so by both Scout and Atticus. She and Scout have a similar relationship to mother daugher; Scout’s mother died when she was two, and Calpurnia has been around for as long as she can remember. Cal is a definite disciplinary figure in the story, who isn’t afraid to tell Scout off and punish her. While Scout thinks that Cal gives her too much tough love, Scout knows that Cal loves her and cares about her