Question:

To Kill A Mockingbird.....?

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what are the changes the main characters undergo from the beginning to the end of the book???

what are the themes at the heart of the story, and can u list the pages on which there explored???

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  1. Google it yourself. God, Wikkipedia is fantastic. Get off  your duff and do some legwork.


  2. http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/mocking/qu...

    The most important theme of To Kill a Mockingbird is the book's exploration of the moral nature of human beings—that is, whether people are essentially good or essentially evil. The novel approaches this question by dramatizing 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. As a result of this portrayal of the transition from innocence to experience, one of the book's important subthemes involves the threat that hatred, prejudice, and ignorance pose to the innocent: people such as Tom Robinson and Boo Radley are not prepared for the evil that they encounter, and, as a result, they are destroyed.

    http://www.gradesaver.com/classicnotes/t...

    This site has quotations explained and page numbers


  3. Well, you see, she is slowly growing away from her dad as the showly grows closer to boo. This is explained by the symbolism of my ham costume at the end of the novel.

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