To Kill a Mocking Bird
Characters
Scout - Narrator
Jem - The brother
Atticus - The dad
Calpurnia - the maid
Dill - the neighbor
Miss Maudie
Miss Caroline
Mr. Walter Cunningham
Mr. Dolphus Raymond
Burris Ewell
Themes
Coexistence of good and evil
Scout and Jem’s transition from a perspective of childhood innocence, in which they assume that people are good because they have never seen evil, to a more adult perspective, in which they have confronted evil and must incorporate it into their understanding of the world.
Importance of moral education
the most important lessons are those of sympathy and understanding
the story charts Scout’s moral education
Atticus devotes himself to instilling a social conscience in Jem and Scout
scenes at school provide a direct counterpoint to Atticus’ effective education
unsympathetic or morally hypocritical teachers
Existence of social inequality
rigid social divisions revealed
prejudice in human interaction
Motifs
Gothic details
unnatural snowfall
fire that destroys Miss Maudie’s house
children’s superstitions about Boo
mad dog
Halloween party on which Bob Ewell attacks the children
Small-town life
Symbols
Mockingbird
represents innocence
Bob Radley
kids' attitude towards him symbolizes their development from innocence toward a grown-up moral perspective