To Kill A Mockingbird Childhood

Words: 1691
Pages: 7

In William Manchester’s famous book, The Glory and the Dream: A Narrative of America. When he wrote about 1932, the opening title is ‘the worst year’. The great depression has been for three years; millions of Americans lost their jobs. People are starving despairing and frigid. Middle class rapidly fraying, many hopeless people suicide at that time. It was the ‘Dark age’; people dropped deeply to the bottom, and cannot see the future. The whole nation got stuck into a dark patch of coffin. Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird showed the time she suffered when she was a child. Rather than say it’s a novel, To Kill A Mockingbird is more like a real portrayal of Lee’s childhood.
To Kill A Mockingbird, as the most popular book in the whole period,
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To kill a Mockingbird takes place in Maycomb which is full of fear, poor and struggles. It was an old and broken town. Empty streets and skew buildings; in the grey light path overgrown with weeds straight stare shot from the mottled shadows. People try to pass the time slowly, but still don’t know how to squander for 24 hours. For local farmers, they cannot offer lawyer’s fees, so that they trade with food. As a lawyer, Atticus Finch also struggle financially. However, many children grow in that tough time. Some of them become the leaders of the United States and outstanding personages in different fields, such as Robert Kennedy, James Baldwin, Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon. We can say that poor society changed them but also created them. The unfair of the society; the racism and formalism all deeply affected their thoughts and the ways they behave in the future. To Kill a Mockingbird is written by, a 9 years old child, Scout’s innocent point of views. She looks at the world with a child’s curiosity, playfulness, innocence and amazement at the world. They are prone to make mistakes, easy to get hurt and let emotions go. But this joy and hardship of growth, insipid story revealed a magical power; bring us out of the mist in the dark. Scout, as the first Mockingbird, she always gets mad at her life. Every time she lost her temper, is a growing experience. To make her understand how is the real life looks like. Because of Miss …show more content…
As the third mockingbird in the story, Boo almost got ‘killed’ by his father. Rumored to people’s gossip, Boo was disfigured by his father and only came out at night. He is the ‘evil’ for children, in contract, he’s totally different. There are conscious mind and the unconscious in our mind. When a person met something horrible and painful, they will lock them away in the unconscious. Boo is an example, because of his terrible childhood, he becomes afraid to communicate with human. Even someone he wants to make friend with. According to Sigmund Freud’s study, self-protection can also explain Boo’s action. “This involves individuals attributing their own unacceptable thoughts, feeling and motives to another person” (Freud, 61). For example, when you hate someone, but your superego tells you that is impossible. Then your mind will figure out the problem by assuming that they don’t like you. Most people who isolated from the society because they afraid to get refuse, so that they don’t even try. Luckily, Boo tries in the end of story. He fights with Mr.Edwell and saves Jem and Scout’s lives. It’s not only a small step for him to knocked off from this world-weird flesh, but also one giant leap for his change. He soon becomes friend with Jem and Scout and feels a normal person’s life. No more hiding and scary. Psycho is always the best topic, it exist in every person’s