РефератыИностранный языкToTo Kill A Mockingbird Vs Child Of

To Kill A Mockingbird Vs Child Of

To Kill A Mockingbird Vs. Child Of … Essay, Research Paper


The story of ?To Kill A Mockingbird? by Harper Lee is an insight


into a little girl?s life. Through the eyes of Jean Louise Finch, also


known as Scout, her world, the township of Maycomb, is a place of


pleasure for her, but that pleasure also contrasts with the pain and


suffering she deals with due to the thoughts and actions of the


townspeople. Even though she is extremely intelligent for her age,


Scout can not understand why so many of the town?s relatively small


population feel the way they do about certain areas of everyday.


The feelings of a young boy, growing up thousands of kilometres


away, almost twenty years premature of Scout?s birth, are extremely


similar to those of Scout in Elizabeth Kata?s novel ?Child Of The


Holocaust?. Hans Hermaman, a young Jewish boy known to his


friends as Harm, has lost his parents during World War II, and is


thrown into a new life, in a small street in the far outskirts of


Frankfurt, in Germany. His street is his life, the air he breathes, and


the light he sees with. His friends are the most important things to


him, but he has an incredible love for academia, and his insight and


intelligence surpasses most of his own age and many children his


senior.


The prejudice he encounters during the novel is harsh and


judgmental, and Harm, being a Jewish boy is thrown head-first into it,


whether he likes it or not.


Both these children are wiser than their years, and both have


encountered many problems due to the narrow-mindedness of elder


people. These children rack their minds, trying to understand and


justify the selectively disparaging thoughts and actions of others. Why


do they despise people they do not know? And how can they do so with


such arrogance? But all these people that seem to show bigotry are


seemingly ordinary people, almost all of them are kind and civil to the


children. How could they possibly so horrible so as to be prejudiced


against anyone or anything?


Scout is an ordinary young girl, who enjoys playing with her


friends, although there are few close ones, and her brother. She lives


in a small southern town called Maycomb. Also living with her are her


brother, Jeremy (Jem), her father Atticus, and their black maid,


Calpurnia. Atticus Finch is a very high profile member of the


community, being a lawyer and probably one of the more wealthy


people in the town.


In Harm?s case, once he is settled into his new life with his


aunty, an obese elderly woman who Harm does not care for much, but


has no negative feelings for, he is let outside into the culdesac which


is destined to become his greatest source of joy, and his new friends


provide with a sense of belonging, a feeling he has never enjoyed


before. Harm, despite his shadowy background, is quite a normal boy,


and his social life at his age is very healthy. His friends? parents enjoy


his company and he is often at a friends? house, for he finds his home


comparatively boring, and the live-in maid his aunty has hired to help


her move around and do housework for her seems to abominate Harm


and his friends.


Both Scout and Harm have a figure in their lives which they find


mysterious and intriguing, although the differences are quite


substantial.


Scout fantasises about a man called Arthur Radley, nicknamed


?Boo? by local children. He is one of a household of ?foot-washers?,


that is, Baptists who apparently believe that everything which is


pleasure is sin. But through a secret hiding place, Boo has given the


Finch children small, yet significant items, and for this Jem and Scout


consider Boo as a friend, and feel close to him in a way.


Young Harm also has a figure in his life whom he is very close to,


but finds himself pulled away by the grips of prejudice society. When


another young boy, Paul, moves to the street with his mother, other


friends parents tell Harm not to go to Paul?s house, because ?Paul?s


mother is a whore, Harm.? Harm goes anyway, in secret, not even


aware of what a ?whore? is, and finds that Paul?s mother is a lovely


lady. Harm is very close to her, and she becomes a mother figure to


the lost Jewish boy. One day, he is told exactly what it is that Paul?s


mother does for a living, and he is shocked. He is forbidden solemnly


to ever venture into her home again, and Harm complies with the


instructions. He loves her as a mother, though, and feels terrible every


time he sees her or thinks about her, and how he has betrayed her. He


wants to talk to her, but knows he can?t, for every other person in the


street despises her, and he thinks that the other families in the street


will believe he is going to her for more than just stories and company.


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Scout?s world is turned upside down when her father becomes


the lawyer for a black man, Tom Robinson, who is accused of raping a


white girl. In the lead-up to the trial, the town is divided; it is virtually


the Finches versus the rest of the white township.


People can not overcome their prejudiced views for the sake of


justice, and Atticus is trying his hardest to keep his morals, his family,


and his own life to fight for this black man singled out and accused of


something he did not do.


Scout and Jem defend their father as much as possible, but are


finding it increasingly difficult, as it seems the whole town, even other


children, are set in theirs ways of thinking and will not change their


views, despite the evidence showing the contrary.


When the battle is fought in the court-rooms, Bob Ewell, the


prosecutor, is shown to the public as a deceitful, evil man who has


beaten his daughter, then tried to pass the blame onto an innocent


black man. In the eyes of the court, Bob is the victor, and Tom


Robinson is sent to jail. But in the eyes of the public, Bob?s image has


taken a plunge, and he is shown for what he is: a man with no morals


and even less decency. Scout feels relief and disappointment, and is


confused as to how people will react and what will become of Tom


Robinson, Bob Ewell and her father. A young girl such as Scout


should never have to fight such rancid forms of racism at such a mild


age.


Harm has heard of his best friend, Rip Spiegel?s party, and


decides to attend. Rip?s mother has never allowed any child to enter


their home, throughout the year and more that Rip and Harm have


been best friends. The night of the party draws near. Harm is


delighted that he will finally have the opportunity to meet Rip?s mother


and he intends to make sure Mrs. Spiegel sees what a nice young man


he is, so she will welcome him back into their home. But disaster is


about to strike, in the form of one discriminatory human being. Harm


is turned away from the party, simply because Rip?s mother will not


have a Jew in her home. Harm is blinded by rage in an instant and


attacks his best friend, crying, screaming.


His happiness in a world that he loved was shattered- all


because of one single person?s prejudiced views.


For Scout, the turmoil of the court case is not over. The


tear-shed and unhappiness preceding the trial counts for nothing. One


night, Scout and Jem are walking back from the school in the dark,


when Bob Ewell has decided to take revenge on Atticus, attacking the


defenceless children with a knife, in a futile struggle to gain happiness


at the expense of others.


Luckily for Scout and Jem, their mysterious friend, Boo Radley is


watching and comes to their rescue. Bob Ewell is killed. The children


are saved.


With Boo Radley finally revealed, a vile man out of the way and a


township slowly realising their mistakes, Scout and Jem?s life is


restored to normal. They are allowed to continue their young lives as


they should.


Harm?s life, however, has suffered nothing short of a tragedy. He


has become everything he never wanted to be, all before he is old


enough to drive a car. He has embarrassed himself to such an extent


that he turns into a more sinister Boo Radley. He no longer ventures


outside, and is considered insane by the rest of the people in the


street, because there is no other option for them to consider. Harm?s


silence is sorrowful. He is now a self-confessed pervert, full of anger,


melancholy, and void. He has cut himself off from the world he once


loved. The death of his guardian slides by without a second thought.


He has nothing. Harm is no more.


Harper Lee decided to portray the scene of a young girl,


extraordinary by some standards, and how she is forced to deal with


racism and prejudice when it becomes very close to her. By writing


?To Kill a Mockingbird? in the first person form, Harper Lee provides a


great deal of insight into what Scout is thinking and feeling about


herself, other people, or thing which are happening around her. ?Child


of The Holocaust? is also provides a great insight into the world of


Hans Hermaman, and is probably even more focused on his thoughts


than that of ?To Kill a Mockingbird?. Elizabeth Kata deals with the


precise thoughts of Harm, and the novel is almost an autobiography


written from Harm?s point of view.


In the bigger picture, both books are essentially about how a


child deals with and thinks about prejudice, and how wrong it is to


judge someone on what they are, not who they are. A child?s point of


view is almost necessary it seems, in demonstrating the error of our


ways.


Youth is innocence. And in some cases, innocence is wisdom.

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