Saturday, July 20, 2019
Harper Lees To Kill a Mockingbird - Faults with Characters, Plot, and
The Flaws of To Kill a Mockingbird     Ã     Is it possible to  judge literary classics to have failings or are they beyond contemporary  measurements? As perfection is not attainable in any media, "classics" such as  To Kill a Mockingbird, a novel by Harper Lee, can be found to have many  instances of fault and flaw. A great novel should ease the reader into learning  the story's characters and histories. It should include a plot that keeps the  reader up all night wanting to read more. And it should also include a theme  that remains clear and focused; to reach out to a reader without being  encumbered. However this is not the case with To Kill a Mockingbird. To Kill a  Mockingbird has faults with its characters, plot, and overall theme.     The introduction of both the characters and their histories are flawed. The  novel hastily presents a great number of characters within a short amount of  written space; causing the reader trouble when trying to differentiate between  them. With a few dozen individuals taking part in the goings on in the story  arc, one finds oneself constantly backtracking through the story to find  previous references and descriptions of the characters to remember who they are.  What is worse is the fact that many of the names of said persons mentioned early  in the story make no appearance at all later on in the work. "...but they were  Haverfords, in Maycomb county a name synonymous with jackass...John Hale Finch  was ten years younger than my father" (Lee 5).      "Jem gave Dill the general attitudes of the more prominent figures: Mr.  Tensaw    Jones voted the straight Prohibition ticket; Miss Emily Davis dipped snuff in     private; Mr. Byron Waller could play the violin..." (Lee 159).      This leads t...              ...un in his hand" (Lee 112). This lesson or  theme is one of several that the children learn in the story, this particular  one being from the incident with Mrs. Dubose. The majority of the novel makes  use these sub arcs and lessons to add meat the novel. But instead dilutes the  true them of the book, and the reason for which is was made.      In conclusion, one finds that because of problems found within the  characters, plot, and theme of the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, that this piece  of classical literature is not perfect. Clearly by realizing its faults one can  see that even a well-known and loved book is often no better than any of the  mediocre novels of today. Classical works can indeed be judged, and many are far  from perfect.     Work Cited:     Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird. (New York, N.Y.; Warner Books, Inc., 1982)  3-5,    99, 112, 159, 164, 247.                      
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