Examples Of Coming Of Age In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Coming of Age Generally, people are quick to judge others by the way they look or dress, that’s human nature. If people take more time to get to know someone and stand in their shoes, the way they think of the person might change. Coming-of-age involves recognizing different perspectives. In Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird Scout is an example of a character whose coming-of-age process involves gaining a different perspective. As the day was just about over Scout states that, “turned to go home. Street lights winked down the street and all the way to town. I had never seen our neighborhood from this angle”(Lee 373). Scout gets a new perspective on her way home, about Boo Radley’s lifestyle and the new view that she is now looking at. Tom
Dobbs states that, “Reckless’ sounds like you’re not paying attention. But I was. I made a deliberate point of doing this on an empty stretch of dry interstate, in broad daylight, with good sightlines and no traffic. I mean, I wasn’t just gunning the thing. I was driving.” The boy that was speeding gave his father another perspective about why he did what he did and how he did it safely. Researchers helped gain another perspective by writing, “The resulting account of the adolescent brain-call it the adaptive-adolescent story-casts the teen less as a rough draft than as an exquisitely sensitive, highly adaptable creature wired almost perfectly for the job of moving from the safety of home into the complicated world outside”(Dobbs 3). Researchers published information that allows the father to get a new perspective on the way that the teen brain works and also why he didn’t object to any of the accusations his father was saying except that it was reckless. The father gained a new perspective because of the way his son decided to describe the way he was driving. Coming of age allowed the son to understand what he did wrong, but also gives a detailed explanation that allowed his father to get a new
When I was younger, I wanted to go to the mall with all of my friends and no parents for a birthday party. I was so excited that I got invited to go that I had already told all my friends that I could and that I would see them there. At home, I went to my dad to ask if I could go (thinking the answer would be yes) and he exclaimed “NO” and stared at him shocked because I had already told all my friends that I could go. Questions ran through my head, “why not? I already told all of my friends I could!” I asked. He just stared at me and said “It is very dangerous going alone and I don’t want you to get hurt. End of discussion” and that was it. I flew up to my room and slammed the door because I was so angry and I started thinking to myself that it was so unfair. Then I saw things from his perspective, I wouldn’t want my kid running around in a huge mall without any parents, it was dangerous. I gained a new perspective by putting myself in his shoes and seeing why he wouldn’t let me go to the birthday party. This new perspective helped me understand why it was bad and helped me make better choices in the future. As I was coming-of-age I realized my father’s perspective.
Coming-of-age involves recognizing different perspectives. The new perspectives allow people to think differently about a situation or a person. Gaining new perspective can help people realize the different kinds of life and allow people

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