How Is Scout Finch Selfish

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Scout Finch is the main character of To Kill A Mockingbird. Throughout the story, Scout will learn courage and kindness, and doing what is right. When the book begins, Scout is only 6 years old, and still has a lot to learn. She is a kind person and wants to make Atticus proud, but she has a lot of growing up to do.

Early in the novel, Scout’s short temper and lack of self-control becomes very evident, when her solution to every problem is to fight it. Atticus tells her to “ just hold your head high and keep those fists down … try fighting with your head for a change”. Because Scout wants to make her father proud more than anything, she trains herself to hold her tongue and her fists, showing that she has learned self-control

One of the first …show more content…

Being very young in the beginning of the book, her views of racism have been guided by the people she's around. Before the trial, Scout’s life was relatively sheltered. She knows that blacks are segregated, but their lives do not touch Scout except for Calpurnia. Scout really isn't exposed to the harsh realities of racism until the trial. Here, Scout encounters the taunting of kids and adults. She endures remarks about her father being a "nigger lover" and then finally the travesty of injustice that happens to Tom. Here father provides her with many answer to all the questions she has on the subject, and helps her understand that black people are just regular people, and they need to be treated as regular people.

Throughout the novel lee uses the fictional character of Scout Finch to teach her readers many valuable lessons. By the end of To Kill A Mockingbird, Scout has grown up, both physically and emotionally. She continues to learn valuable truths about her community, and seems to understand a lot about what’s going on in the world. Scout really lives up to her name throughout the book, and continues to search for what's

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