When I first started working on my honors English summer assignment, I came across a new word; motif. After looking up the word in the dictionary, I got the basic understanding that it was a recurring subject, theme, or idea in a piece of literature. When working on my visual organizer for my second project, I chose motif to be the dominant literary feature. I still wasn't sure of what it was, but I just chose multiple symbols throughout the book and decided that they were the motif. And then we started to read "To Kill A Mockingbird". By first week of reading, I was already noticing the symbols in the book. That's when I finally understood that a motif was a symbol that was being repeatedly used throughout the novel to support other ideas or themes.
The mockingbird motif is used in the novel in many different ways. It is first introduced when Atticus warns Scout when he got a toy gun that it's a sin to kill a mocking, because they are innocent creatures that have done no harm. The motif was more prominently used however in the form of Tom Robinson and Boo Radley. Both men were very decent well-meaning people, and for this reason many people, such as Atticus, beleived they should be left alone. Atticus is always trying to teach his kids to have strong morals, and the mockingbird motif further enhances this theme of respect. However, Atticus's idea of equality clashes harshly with the prejudice present in Maycomb, creating another theme of good versus evil. When you think about all the themes and ideas present in the novel, the mockingbird motif is behind almost all of them.
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Mockingbird Motif - Week 8
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week 8
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