How Does Atticus Change In To Kill A Mockingbird

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People can have very wide ranges of thoughts and personalities. From being very exciting and outgoing to being the opposite. Thoughts and personalities change because of things in life that you may learn off of or hear about. It may inspire you and change your view on someone or something. Throughout the story To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, we see that many characters undergo changes because of things that happened during the time period they lived in. A character in specific name Atticus, a well-known lawyer of Maycomb, Alabama, often shows us these changes in personality in ways that some of us readers didn’t realize. Many of the things Atticus says and does in the book makes other characters in the book realize things. As a reader it can also make you realize what Scout or Jem realize. Sometimes Atticus tries to emphasize the moral or lesson he talks about in an indirect way, or direct way. …show more content…

A father of two children and a lawyer, he runs his family on his own after his wife died. He has a dry sense of humor as we quickly learn his character to having a strong sense of morality and justice. With his serious personality, he is one of the few people in Maycomb so not be racist. Throughout the story, Atticus gives his children life lessons and advice that he has learned himself. One day he told Scout an important lesson about putting someone in their shoes or in their point of view. Atticus told scout, “You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view.” (Lee 33). Atticus mentions this because Scout was having a bad day at school. This quote is crucial as it has its lesson shown through the entire book. We can tell that Atticus cares about helping his daughter during hard times. Atticus is a primary character because he serves as a moral backbone for a majority of the

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