To Kill a Mockingbird

Now that you have finished the first 8 chapters of To Kill a Mockingbird, how do you think Scout’s point of view as a child affects the narration of the story? How does it affect your understanding of the events as they unfold?

Now that you have finished the first 8 chapters of To Kill a Mockingbird, how do you think Scout’s point of view as a child affects the narration of the story? How does it affect your understanding of the events as they unfold? (Your response should be at least 200 words in length.)

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Scout is writing as an adult through the voice of a child. The most outstanding aspect of To Kill a Mockingbird's construction lies in its distinctive narrative point of view. Scout Finch, who narrates in the first person ("I"), is nearly six years old when the novel opens. The story, however, is recalled by the adult Scout; this allows her first-person narrative to contain adult language and adult insights yet still maintain the innocent outlook of a child. The adult perspective also adds a measure of hindsight to the tale, allowing for a deeper examination of events. The narrative proceeds in a straightforward and linear fashion, only jumping in time when relating past events as background to some present occurrence. Scout's account is broken into two parts: the two years before the trial, and the summer of the trial and the autumn that follows. Some critics have proposed that Part II itself should have been broken into two parts, the trial and the Halloween pageant; William T. Going suggests that this arrangement would keep the latter section from "seeming altogether an anticlimax to the trial of Tom."