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The text below is suggestive of how Scout's point of view affects how we experience the trial in "To Kill a Mockingbird"
How does scouts point of view affect the perception of the narrative?
The narrator and main character of To Kill a Mockingbird is Jean Finch, who writes the book in the first person. Scout has a unique perspective or point of view that is crucial to understanding the meaning of the work because she is only six when the novel starts and eight when it finishes. Scout's youth makes her somewhat of an untrustworthy narrator.
She misinterprets and misunderstands things because of her naivety. She views her father as "feeble" since he is "almost fifty," which to an adult is middle age but looks old to a toddler.
When Dill says he wants to "get us a baby," Scout is unsure of how babies are created and speculates that perhaps God drops them to earth from above.
What is point of view?
Point of view simply refers to the perspective form which a story is viewed or perceived.
The narrators point of view is curial but it is not the only point of view. Every story has at least two points of views, and each impacts greatly on how the audience see the characters in the story.
Learn more about Mockingbird:
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