People can judge others in many different ways that can cause others to be lonely. Friends can judge people that they knew to his friends about what he did.Then his friends will not be interested in him anymore. Even if they don't know who that person is, they still judge them on the way they look or the things they do which can cause them to become lonely from be judged. Even people who judge others can be lonely because those people will hate them for judging them. People in this world get judged because they were black back then and judged for being mean to others and being judged even though those people don't really know you. Because people judge others, and tell the community how they should think about them, those who are judged Mayella is the daughter of Bob Ewell and both of them actually live in trash and they are known as white trash.They live in trash near where the blacks live which Bob and Mayella do not like at all.They do not like their skin color because they don't like how they are different. Mayella could not have any friends because she hated the blacks and those are the only people she can talk to that are close are the blacks.Mayella is very poor and she does not like anyone and hates they way people talk to her like when Atticus called her what she does not want him to call which makes her think that is bad.She was never interested in other people and wants to stay away from them. She judges them on the way they talk to them and the way their skin color is because she thinks blacks are a threat and they way people talk to her are mean things even though they try to be really nice to her. Scout says “Mayella Ewell must have been the loneliest person in the world” This shows that Mayella is lonely because Mayella is always alone or with the children to take care of which she can't leave home because she has to take care of the children and that can't get her out of her home. This causes Mayella to become lonely because she is judging them the wrong way like she judges the blacks because they are black and she Arthur Radley or Boo Radley was a nice kid but he did something his parents were not happy about and made Boo grounded for life. So he has been living in the basement for life since he was a kid and now no one knows what he looks like. He was known to get outside at night where no one can see him him and he stays hidden. Boo is lonely as it seems because he was grounded by his parents and its for life.Boo cant get out of the house only at night when his parents are not awake.Boo has never been seen for so long only as a kid he was seen before what he did.He is very afriad of the many people in Maycomb.He does not want to leave the house Boo is scared of the people to judge him on what he did like when he was known to kill Bob Ewell.Boo is afriand of these people in judging him of what he did.His parents judged of what he did as a kid and grounds him for so long that he cant get out of the house.His parents were stricted about it in whch that can make him lonely.Jem said “...he wants to stay inside” which he is talking about Boo Radley that he is so lonely that he does not want to go out side with the people his loneliness is not strong enough to seek friendship even after he saved the children from Bob Ewell that he stil cant make friends.He does not want people to judge him from killing Bob and he would be to
Since she was not taught respect from her father, she would not know much about it. “Won’t answer a word you say long as you keep on mockin’ me,’ Mayella said. Mayella is not one of those other people in the small town of Maycomb that lives in a nice neighborhood. Mayella lives behind a garbage dump with her father and siblings. During the trial of Tom Robinson, Scout describes Mayella’s home.
Often in life people prejudge others, but their view changes as they get to know the person. In to kill a mockingbird by Harper lee Jem and Scout prejudge Boo Radley and their father Atticus. Jem and Scout believe their father has absolutely no skill. Throughout the book the kids get to see more of his skills. Boo Radley is considered a monster in Maycomb and Scout and Jem use the town’s judgment as their own. After learning more about Boo and getting to know him they realize he is opposite of what they thought. Because Jem and Scout are influenced by other people’s opinions they are able to learn from their mistakes and develop a new perspective on people.
By looking at the theme of race in To Kill a Mockingbird, it is clear that people judge others based on their own opinion and feelings. Racism is a kind of judgment which is a judgment that people make based off their own feelings, for it is not a righteous judgment. God made all man in his image, colored or not all men are sons of God. Judging a colored person because of his appearance is not judging righteously, thus is not justified. If we judge the way God wants us too, then there is no harm in judging.
Boo Radley is the next door neighbor of the Finch’s. He is an outsider of the community, because he does not leave the house. He got in some trouble as a teenager, so his father locked him up inside the house. After his father died, his brother moved in with him. While Boo was locked up inside is house, the people of Maycomb County made up stories about him. The legend of Boo Radley was well-known to the people of Maycomb. Jem describes Boo, “Boo was about six-and-a-half feet tall, judging from his tracks; he dined on raw squirrels and any cats he could catch, that’s why his hands were bloodstained—if you ate an animal raw, you could never wash the blood off. There was a long jagged scar that ran across his face; what teeth he had were yellow and rotten; his eyes popped, and he drooled most of the time.” (Lee ). Boo is an innocent character because all he does stay inside his own house, and does not bother anybody. Yet the entire town believes that he could be a murderer. Harper Lee is showing that if you do not fit into southern society, they will make you into an outsider and a bad legend. Another example of Boo Radley being an innocent character is when he gives a blanket to Scout. Miss Maudie Atkinson, one of the Finch’s neighbors, had a house fire. Atticus (Scout and Jem’s father) woke up the kids and made them go outside, in case the fire spread to their house. While Scout was not looking someone gave her a blanket, “‘Someday, maybe, Scout can thank him for covering her up.’ ‘Thank who?’ I asked. ‘Boo Radley. You were so busy looking at the fire you didn’t know it when he put the blanket around you.’”(Lee ). Boo Radley is an innocent character because he helped warm up Scout in the cold, yet Scout was still scared that Boo had been near here. Harper Lee is showing us that Boo could do a nice thing, and yet Scout would still be scared because of his reputation. Finally, another
They have many misconceptions of people, places, and concerts in Maycomb county. However as they are young and don't really have opinions themselves. They abide by those presented them. At the start of the novel Scout and Jem see Mr. Arthur Radley or "Boo", as a dangerous, crazy, and rather isolated man. Although never being in his presence or in association with him they always make assumptions about him. They constantly pestered his household and played games that mocked him, "..time to play Boo's big scene...steal the scissors...Jem would fake plunge into Dill's thigh..."(LEE40).They also had the misconception that Boo was kept inside forcefully by his family. Boo was also blamed for unresolved events. As time goes by they mature and start to develop more of an understanding of Boo, "..I think I'm beginning to understand why Boo Radley's stayed shut up in his house all this time...he wants to stay inside"(LEE227). Jem develops an understanding as to why Boo Radley stays inside. It's not because his family forces him to stay inside. He realizes that when living in a town like Maycomb, there is an incredible amount of judgement and labeling that occurs. It becomes evident to him that Boo has no place and isn't welcomed into the society. Especially with having a stereotype "glued" to his identity. Scout then has an
America is the proud author of many timeless novels. Fitzegerald’s The Great Gatsby, Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, and Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men all reveal a glimpse into previously unseen worlds to their audiences. But few of them has so profound an impact as Nelle “Harper” Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird. This captivating novel enthralled the country and made it reexamine its preexisting perceptions about childhood, bravery, and morality. In spite of the importance of these concepts, the most far-reaching theme is how prejudice and education coincide, or, more accurately, how prejudice and a lack of education coincide (Theme 1). In To Kill a Mockingbird, Lee explores how a normally rational person’s ability to reason can be tainted by prejudice, even subconsciously. Rarely do the characters in Lee’s novel make an effort to be cruel, but in the 1930s South, prejudice was less about an active effort to hurt others, but instead was an affliction brought about by an unconscious combination of upbringing, culture, and social or economic status.
Both Arthur Radley and Tom Robinson are innocent victims to judgment by others in Maycomb. Superstitious attributes follow Arthur, while Tom is struck by racism and prejudice. Arthur Radley is thought of as an intimidating, phantom-like person. As Jem is describing Arthur to Dill, he tells him “inside the house lived a malevolent phantom” (Lee 8). Jem’s behavior represents the community’s perception of Arthur. Another way Arthur is misjudged is by the nickname that was given to him; “Boo”. This nickname was developed by the pe...
Boo is a secluded and shy man who never leaves his house. There are only rumors of Boo creeping out when it’s pitch dark outside. Besides those rumors, he is always kept locked up inside his house with “the shutters and doors closed” (9). It is not until one day, when Jem and Scout are walking along the road coming home from a Halloween event at school that Boo Radley comes out from his house. The children are walking silently home when they suddenly heard the shuffling of someone’s shoes. Not before long, Bob Ewell runs straight towards the children, knife in hand. While the children are being tackled, there is a “crunching” (262) sound of Jem’s arm, and he is left on the cold and damp ground. Scout is so entangled that it is hard for her to see. What she does manage to see is a man carrying Jem home. This man is Boo Radley. When Bob Ewell is fighting the children, Boo has to make a decision on whether or not he wants to reveal himself. In the end, Boo ends up fighting off Bob Ewell and saving the childrens’ lives. Even though Boo is always locked away from the rest of society and doesn’t want to be seen, he gets over his fear and fights for the children’s safety. He truly shows courage because he stands by what is right and leaves his house to save Atticus’s
Racial prejudice consumed the mob (pg 166), which wished to prevent Tom even gaining a court hearing, the most basic form of justice. This is probably the fiercest form of prejudice in the novel.
Maycomb, an old town that is quiet and small, is suffering through the hardships of the Great Depression. It hits the poor the hardest. People in Maycomb soon have problems that involve the impact of the Great Depression. During the Great Depression the rich families soon have a problem like the poor do, which of course is poverty. Poverty soon makes its way down the caste system. In Harper Lee’s book, To Kill a Mockingbird, she vividly describes the domestic violence that the town Maycomb has and how “Maycomb’s disease” soon burst into disputes that involve Atticus Finch and his family; Jem and Scout. One of the most important topics that Harper Lee discusses in To Kill a Mockingbird is racism. It
Boo Radley, also known as Arthur Radley, is the scary, evil creature that lives in the creepy old house down the street from Jem and Scout, and is misjudged at first. Jem and Scout, two main characters, first see Boo as some sort of scary monster. Jem described him in the first chapter as “...six-and-a-half feet tall, judging from his tracks...” and said “...he dined on raw squirrels and any cats he could catch, that's why his hands were bloodstained- if you ate an animal raw, you could never wash the blood off...” Jem also mentioned Boo had a “...long jagged scar that ran across his face; what teeth he had were yellow and rotten; his eyes popped, and he drooled most of the time.” Scout and Jem also call Boo a “...malevolent phantom...” As if that isn't bad enough, the kids hear and tell horrible stories about Boo. One is of how he stabbed his dad with a pair of scissors; another tells how he was locked up in the courthouse basement. Even with such a grisly initial perception at the beginning of...
“‘Do you think they’re true, all those things they say about B—Mr. Arthur?’... ‘No, child,’ she said. ‘That is a sad house. I remember Arthur Radley when he was a boy. He always spoke nicely to me, no matter what folks said he did.’” (Lee 51). Scout asks Miss Maudie about what she hears out on the streets of her town, the rumors about Boo behaving insane because of a miniscule event that happened years ago, which partly places the blame on Boo’s father for acting as a religious fanatic. Boo Radley believed his father’s actions signified insanity; however, Boo tried to show Jem and Scout that he would not act as his father did by giving them small gifts, and even saving the children. “Boo left the safe environment of his home to risk his life for hers, and she knows that his essential goodness and vulnerability need protecting” (Felty 299). Boo intervenes when Bob Ewell tries to hurt Scout and ends up killing Mr Ewell in the midst of the struggle—though the accomplishment of coming out of the confines of his safe house and acting hero goes to Boo Radley. Scout finally realizes that the rumors about Boo prove the inaccuracy of the town’s perceptions, the Tom Robinson case and the mockingbird lesson
When I was little I would “judge” people by how they look and what they would wear. I thought why would they wear that in public? Or they look nasty. Like Scout I learned how not to judge people and get to know them before I do. In the story How To Kill A Mockingbird, a character named scout learns how to not judge people by their look, and she has people to help her along the way.
“Prejudice is a burden that confuses the past, threatens the future, and renders the present inaccessible” (Angelou). Maya Angelou illustrates the destructive nature of prejudice, and the effects that it may have on society. Her childhood took place primarily in the 1930’s, a time also known as the Depression Era where racism dictated the lives of many African-Americans that Harper Lee details in her novel To Kill a Mockingbird. Martin Luther King Jr., an advocate of black rights during the depression era, details in his essay “An Experiment in Love” how Christian love, or “agape” had sparked the African-American nonviolence movement. The novel is told through the perspective of a 6-year old girl, Scout and centralizes on two innocent figures, Arthur Radley, a social outcast, and Tom Robinson, a black man accused of rape, who are persecuted due to the prejudiced view of the town. As she matures and learns about the town, she begins to develop ideas and pass judgment on individuals that are in the town. Atticus Finch, Scout’s father, takes up the court trial to defend Tom Robinson, who is wrongly accused and sentenced of the rape of a white woman and eventually runs, only to be shot by the prison guards. Despite the open communication present in Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, there is deficiency of love, as the author illustrates that societal prejudice is inevitable and leads to discrimination.
Other people judgment has made many people commit many unwanted actions. We as humans care a lot about what others think so much that it is thousand of online blogs dedicated to people judging others. Social media has provided a platform for other to judge each other. Everyday that i go on Facebook there is some kind of disagreement that started from someone judging another person. A little judgement is okay for certain situations but if it is there a lot it creacts a hostile situation. I do not like to be judged . I find that it feels like someone violated me by assuming things about me that they do not is true. Sometimes judgement can be a good thing. For example, when a person needs some type direction