Alexa Glady
Mrs. Marton
Adv. Eng. 9 - F
25 May 2023
Compare/Contrast Essay
Many books and their film adaptations are very different, but the film adaptation of To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee is quite similar to the book, with small differences. To Kill A Mockingbird is about Jean Lousie Finch, also known as Scout, and her family. The Finch family includes Scout, Jem, Atticus, and their cook, Calpurnia. The story is set in Maycomb, Alabama: a tired little town during the Great Depression. Scout, the protagonist and narrator, is looking back to when she was about six to nine years old, while her father was taking on a controversial court case. To Kill A Mockingbird, the novel by Harper Lee, is similar to the film version because Scout is a tomboy and Atticus acts proudly about defending Tom Robinson; yet the film differs by not showing Aunt Alexandra.
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In the novel, Scout is always wearing overalls instead of a dress like other little girls do. In the movie, Scout is also shown wearing overalls, not a dress. In both the movie and the novel, Scout can be seen getting in fights with other children, such as when she beat up Walter Cunningham for getting her in trouble: “… I was rubbing his nose in the dirt… ‘He made me start off on the wrong foot’” (22). She also gets in trouble for nearly getting into a fight with Cecil Jacobs after he insulted her father for taking on Tom Robinson’s case “He had announced… that Scout Finch’s daddy defended n*****s” (74). These are not very ladylike actions, which shows how Scout is a tomboy in both the novel and the
A Tomboy Or A Lady? Scout has already displayed her tomboy tendencies in the previous chapters of To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. She plays boys' games, such as football and rolling in a tire; she prefers her overalls to skirts; and she likes to fight. In Chapter 6, she: "leaped over the low wall that separated Miss Rachel's yard from our driveway."
These things are seen as Scout ages in the form of her dirty overalls, her way of behavior and attitude towards others, and her maturity level. Girls are often expected to act more “ladylike” which forces them to mature much more quickly than others could. It is this exact idea that causes Scout to lash out and be more aggressive than a “lady” would be. “Jem was scowling triumphantly. “Nothin’ to it.
Her Aunt Alexandra and several other women in the novel repeatedly stressed the importance of Scout living up to the gender roles that were bestowed upon her at birth. They found it unacceptable that she wore overalls and was not interested in hosting parties or getting dressed up. All of Scout’s friends are boys and her preferred activities are considered to be boyish. She initiates fights in the schoolyard frequently, which is obviously seen as unladylike. They even disapprove of her preference to be called Scout as opposed to her more feminine name, Jean
To kill a Mockingbird- Scout To Kill A Mockingbird is a movie about The Finches, a family that is very different in a time where discrimination was a main part of their world. In Maycomb, Alabama in the early 1930s it was very rare for a southern family to not be racist, or discriminate towards anyone. The main character Scout, shows many important character traits including courage, adventurousness, and respectfulness.
Elli LaFay Mrs. Marton Adv. English 9/F 25 May 2023 Compare and Contrast To Kill A Mockingbird is a great movie and novel. The novel goes into more detail than the movie did. The movie did go into more detail about the images of the characters and the setting of Maycomb's town.
Scout displays a more innocent essence throughout the novel. She doesn’t comprehend
To Kill A Mockingbird, written by Harper Lee, is a coming-of-age story. This story is about the Finch family living in the unjust times of the 1930s in their hometown of Maycomb, Alabama. The main character Scout and her brother Jem are children who grow very much in the three years of their lives in this book. Atticus,the father of the Finch family is a lawyer that is different than everyone else in society and tries to view everyone. Because of Atticus’s morality he does something any other white lawyer wouldn’t do.
I declare to the Lord you’re gettin’ more like a girl everyday” (51-52). Jem said this when Scout was too scared to go to the Radley’s house. She doesn’t want them to go because she is scared they will get killed by Boo, but after he said that she felt like she has no choice but to go because she doesn’t want them to see her differently and can’t convince them not to go. In both the movie and the book, Jem says many things about Scout being a girl, making her seem different from them by
To Kill A Mockingbird is a story that takes place during the Great Depression in Alabama. It is a coming of age story narrated by the main character, Scout Finch, and displays the way that she and her brother, Jem Finch, mature. In the movie adaptation of this classic novel, multiple events were changed, which affected the development of the story and of certain characters. The novel To Kill A Mockingbird was better than the movie because the novel developed the setting, the dual plots, the theme of racism, and the character of Jem Finch better than the movie. Additionally, multiple events were omitted from the movie.
Scout learned to ignore what others said to her about becoming more like a “proper“ girl. Scout does not allow the society to influence her at the beginning of the book she acts and dresses the way she wants too. Scout does not care what other people think of her, she
Ultimately, Scout overcomes the social norms placed upon women when she punches Francis in the face, picks a fight with Cecil Jacobs and chooses to spend most of her time playing with Jem and Dill. First and foremost, Scout escapes the restrictions imposed upon women by continuing to play with Jem and Dill instead of indulging herself in learning how to cook or drinking tea with other women. Although she will sometimes sit with Calpurnia in the kitchen and drink tea with her aunt
Scout is a tomboy and she usually solves her problems with her fists. Atticus is one of the only people that accept Scout for who she is. The rest of her family is constantly trying to make her act more like a lady and this is enforced greatly when her
Famous American novelist and humorist Mark Twain once said, “Comparison is the death of joy.” That statement is most certainly true when one compares himself or herself to other people with regards to worldly possessions. It is so easy to look at others who sport designer jeans, speed down the highway in a Mercedes Benz, and live in the most fashionable and sought after neighborhoods and become at least mildly envious. In that respect, comparison most certainly can be the death of joy.
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is an amazing book with an abundant of surprises. Set back in the 1930’s in Maycomb, Alabama, when the Great Depression was happening and racism from the civil war still rages on in this southern city. All the quotes and themes in the novel can still be associated to life today. As the book was narrating in the past by Jean Louise Finch (Scout), there is one man that guides her and her brother, Jem Finch. It is their father, Atticus Finch.
‘To Kill a Mockingbird’, is about the lives of Scout and her brother, Jem Finch, who are growing up in Maycomb, Alabama during the 1930’s. Along with their summer friend, Dill, the children become fascinated with the idea of getting a glimpse of their mysterious unseen neighbour, Boo Radley. Meanwhile, Jem and Scout’s attorney father, Atticus Finch, has decided