How Does Jem Mature In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Harper Lee’s renowned book To Kill a Mockingbird is highly praised for the lessons it teaches, it’s persuasive humor, and how it tells a story of growth. It is set in the small town of Maycomb Alabama in the 1930’s and tells the story of scout finch. Although the novel is mainly about Scout as she matures through childhood innocence, he brother, Jem, is still a driving factor in the story. Harper Lee uses the characterization of Jem to illustrate the difficulty of growing up in the way he struggles to make decisions, struggles to take responsibility, and struggles with injustice in the lives of those around him. The ways Jem struggles to decide what is more valuable to him, his pride or being moral, demonstrates the struggle that growing …show more content…

After finding that Mr. Nathan has ended Jem and Scout’s sole connection with Boo Radley, Jem is distraught. When Scouts asks him to come in he responds saying, “ ‘ After while,’ He stood until nightfall, and I waited for him, When we went in the house I saw that he had been crying; his face was dirty in the right places, but I thought it odd that I had not heard him,”(Lee 84). Jem observes his father and other adults as they face their own problems, and aspires to do the same when he is upset. He does not want Scout to see him break down and act unlike his father, so he goes off alone. It is tough to not depend on others for comfort and condolence, and the way that Jem struggles to do so shows why growing up is …show more content…

Throughout the novel Jem helps Scout resist the urge to fight, but when Mrs. Dubose takes slewing insults too far for Jem, he reacts in an out of character way. Scout says this as he goes berserk, “We had just come to her gate when Jem snatched my baton and ran flailing wildly up the steps Mrs. Dubose’s front yard, forgetting everything Atticus had said, forgetting that she packed a pistol under her shawls, forgetting that if Mrs. Dubose missed, her girl Jessie probably wouldn’t,”(Lee 137). The time that Jeme forgets himself is after he is harassed by an adult, since to him adults should be just and respectful. He is learning that the world is imperfect, and he does not understand the tension between what is ideal and what is unethical. He struggles to understand this cruelty, since he is young. This struggle to grasp why to world around him is so unjust illustrates just how confusing growing up can

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