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To Kill A Mockingbird Study Guide

To Kill a Mockingbird

By Harper Lee

Study Guide – Part 1

Chapters 1 -11

To Kill A Mockingbird is set in the imaginary district of Maycomb County in southern Alabama. The story begins in the summer of 1933 and ends on Halloween night, 1935. The country is in the grips of the Great Depression. Throughout the nation there is widespread poverty and unemployment. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, with his “New Deal” program, is trying to improve the desperate situation.

But Maycomb County is relatively untouched by this nationwide disaster. Situated twenty miles southeast of the river, and more than thirty miles from Selma, Maycomb is slow to respond to change of any kind. For many years this rural area has been poor and undeveloped. Black people receive low wages as field workers and house servants. White farmers are often more likely to own land, but their crops are often meager, trade is slow or sporadic, and they are often cash poor. Because of its relative isolation, Maycomb’s population has remained virtually unchanged for many years. Newcomers and new ideas are not accepted easily. Poverty afflicted the rural South for decades. Racial prejudice ran high, and while blacks were technically free, the so-called Jim Crow laws, passed in the 1880s and 1890s, kept them from voting and segregated them from white social institutions.

Harper Lee’s Maycomb, Alabama is in many ways a microcosm of small towns throughout the South of the 1930s. Typically, southern towns had three social classes, more or less descended from the three major groups of early settlers (planters, farmers, and slaves). “Old family” southerners formed an upper class (though not all had upper-class incomes). While many were open-minded (like Atticus Finch), many more (Like Atticus’ sister Alexandra) were inordinately proud of their ancestry and tried to preserve the pre-Civil War values of elegant southern society. At the poverty level were often hard working white farmers (like the Cunninghams), who had to struggle to make ends meet. At the bottom of the local society were the blacks, who worked chiefly as servants (like Calpurnia) or farm laborers (like Tom Robinson). Segregated from white social institutions, blacks were often subjected to great deprivation and humiliation.

By 1960, when Harper Lee published To Kill A Mockingbird, the civil rights movement was under way, and pressures to end segregation and racial discrimination were mounting. Harper Lee was among many enlightened southern whites who joined with blacks in the cause of civil rights.

“To Kill A Mockingbird: Harper Lee.” Scribner Literature Novel Guide. Scribner Laidlaw. 1989.

“To Kill A Mockingbird: Harper Lee.” Study Guide. Prentice Hall. 1991.

Harper Lee, the author of To Kill a Mockingbird, had many childhood experiences which are similar to those of her narrator, Scout Finch.

Harper Lee's Childhood

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Scout Finch's Childhood

Grew up in 1930s - rural southern Alabama town

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Grew up in 1930s - rural southern Alabama town

Father - Amasa Lee - attorney who served in state legislature in Alabama

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Father - Atticus Finch - attorney who served in state legislature in Alabama

Older brother and young neighbor (Truman Capote) are playmates

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Older brother and young neighbor (Dill) are playmates

Harper Lee - an avid reader

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Scout reads before she enters school; reads Mobile Register newspaper in first grade

Six years old when Scottsboro trials were meticulously covered in state and local newspapers /

Six years old when the trial of Tom Robinson takes place

From http://library.advanced.org/12111/SG/SG5.html#authorChapter 1

Background References

These are people, places, and terms you may read and need to know more about.

Chapter 1

Andrew Jackson: military hero (1767-1845) who defeated the Creek Indians in Alabama in 1814. He later served as the seventh president of the United States.

Battle of Hastings: battle in which the Norman invaders conquered England in 1066.

John Wesley’s: John Wesley (1703-1791) was the founder of Methodism.

Nothing to fear…itself: a reference to President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s statement in his 1933 inaugural address that “we have nothing to fear but fear itself.”

Dracula: classic horror film about a vampire (1931).

Victor Appleton: author of the popular Tom Swift novels, which focused on the efforts of an “All-American boy.”

Edgar Rice Burroughs: creator of the Tarzan and other popular fictional characters (1875-1950).

flivver: old, cheap automobile

Tuscaloosa: site of major Alabama medical center

Pensacola: city in northwest Florida

Vocabulary

Directions: Using a dictionary, match the word with its definition.
_____ assuage (v.) / A. authoritative statement
_____ dictum (n.) / B. calmed
_____ malevolent (adj.) / C. unclear
_____ nebulous (adj.) / D. often silent
_____ nocturnal (adj.) / E. not defiled or disgraced
_____ repertoire(n.) / F. desiring to harm others
_____ taciturn (adj.) / G. of or occurring at night
_____ unsullied (adj.) / H. the stock of plays that a group of performers has learned

Focus Box

Directions: As you read, pay attention to the following topics. Take notes for facts/details you feel will be relevant
Scout / Maycomb
Jem / Atticus
Simon Finch / Calpurnia
Dill / Mr. Radley
Arthur (Boo) Radley

Study Guide Questions

1. Who is the narrator of the story? What point of view is used?

2. What is the setting of the story?

3. When does Jem think that the events that led up to his broken arm really began? What about Scout?

4. What careers do Atticus and his brother Jack pursue?

5. When did Atticus’s wife die? Who helps bring up his young children? What type of person is she?

6. How old are Scout and Jem at the beginning of the story?

7. What was the main activity of the summer for Scout and Jem?

8. In the beginning of the novel ,who first gives Scout and Jem the idea of making Boo Radley come out?

9. What were some of the stories about Boo Radley?

10. What occurrence almost resulted in Arthur’s placement in the state industrial school ?

11. What habits of the Radleys made them aliens in the town of Maycomb?

12. According to Miss Stephanie, what did Boo Radley do one day while clipping times from the Maycomb Tribune? Why is this event significant?

13. Who moved into the Radley place when Boo’s father died?

Chapters 2 and 3

Background References

Chapter 2

Dewey Decimal System: a system for classifying library books, developed by Melvil Dewey. Jem confuses it with the theories of progressive educator, John Dewey.

WPA: The Works Progress Administration was established in 1935 to provide jobs for people on relief.

the crash: the stock market crash of 1929, which ushered in the Great Depression of the 1930s.

hain’t: ghost

Chapter 3

cootie: louse, small animal that can be found living on the human scalp

Vocabulary

Directions: Using a dictionary, match the word with its definition.
_____contentious (adj.) / A. originating or existing in a particular place
_____covey (n.) / B. deviating from the conventional standard
_____erratic (adj.) / C. a small group
_____fractious (adj.) / D. quarrelsome
_____fraught (adj.) / E. filled (with)
_____indigenous (adj.) / F. irritable

Focus Box

Chapter 2
Scout’s (Jean Louise) first day of school / Cunningham family
Miss Caroline / Little Chuck Little
Chapter 3
Calpurnia / Ewell family
Atticus’s parenting skills

Study Guide Questions

1. Why did Scout have to sit in the corner on the first day of school?

2. What information does Scout give Miss Caroline about the Cunninghams?

3. Why did Atticus say that Mr. Cunningham “came from a set breed of men”? What does his remark mean?

4. In Maycomb, what sealed an oral contract?

5. Why does Jem extend an invitation to Walter? What can you infer about the values of the Finch home based on this gesture?

6. Why does Calpurnia get upset with Scout? What lesson does Scout learn from this encounter?

7. Why were the Ewells considered “disgrace of Maycomb”?

8. Why does Scout want to quit school?

9. Discuss two examples of Atticus’s wise and effective parenting skills.

Chapters 4-6

Background References

Chapter 4

scuppernongs: sweet grapes common in the southeastern states.

One Man’s Family: popular weekly radio show of the 1930s.

Chapter 5

Second Battle of the Marne: a major battle of World War I (1918).

Chapter 6

Kudzu-covered front porch: Kudzu is a rapidly spreading vine that grows in the deep South.

Vocabulary

Directions: Using a dictionary, match the word with its definition.
_____auspicious (adj.) / A. very harmful
_____edification (n.) / B. any highly infectious, epidemic disease
_____malignant (adj.) / C. favorable
_____pestilence (n.) / D. intellectual or moral enlightenment

Focus Box

Oak Tree/Gifts / Games
Miss Maudie / Foot-washing Baptists
Jem’s behavior / Dill’s sophistication
Atticus / Notes/Contact

Study Guide Questions

1. What did Scout find in the oak tree?

2. Describe the Boo Radley game.

3. What two reasons does Scout give for quitting this game?

4. What does Miss Maudie hate so much?

5. What does Miss Maudie explain to Scout about the Radleys?

6. How do the children first attempt to pass a note to Boo Radley? What is Atticus’s reaction?

7. What happens when the children finally get near the Radley porch?

8. What is Nathan Radley’s response?

9. Why does Jem have to return to the Radley place alone?

Chapters 7-8

Background References

Chapter 8

Rosetta Stone: ancient Egyptian tablet. It provided the key to deciphering hieroglyphics but had nothing to do whatsoever with predicting the weather.

Appomattox: site of Lee’s surrender to Grant in 1865, which ended the Civil War.

morphodite: regionalism for hermaphrodite (having both male and female characteristics).

Vocabulary

Directions: Using a dictionary, match the word with its definition.
_____aberrations (n.) / A. to cross or take out
_____delete (v.) / B. committed (a crime)
_____perpetrated (v.) / C. deviations from the normal or usual

Focus Box

Pants

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Miss Maudie

Boo Radley

/ Oak Tree

Study Guide Questions

1. When Jem returns to get his pants what does he notice about them?

2. How is Boo Radley trying to make friends?

3. What is the mean thing Nathan Radley does?

4. That winter is very cold, what happens for the first t ime in many years? What do the children do?

5. What happens to the house next door? Why was Miss Maudie so calm in her reaction to the tragedy?

6. Who puts the blanket around Scout? Why does Scout stop Atticus from returning the blanket?

7. What picture of Boo Radley is emerging from these incidents?

8. What important lesson do Jem and Scout learn as a result of their realization about Boo Radley?

Chapters 9-11

Background References

Chapter 9

Missouri Compromise: act of Congress (1820) intended to maintain balance between free and slave states.

Stonewall Jackson: Confederate general (1824-1863).

Rose Aylmer: reference to a poem by the English poet Walter Savage Landor (1775-1864).

Lord Melbourne: British statesman (1779-1832)

Chapter 10

Jew’s Harp: a simple folk instrument used in country music

Chapter 11

CSA: Confederate States of America

Ivanhoe: novel of twelfth century England by Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832).

Vocabulary

Directions: Using a dictionary, match the word with its definition.
_____apoplectic (adj.) / A. honest and naive
_____articulate (adj.) / B. noisy or unruly
_____calomel (n.) / C. of or like sudden paralysis, caused by a rupture of blood vessels in the brain
_____foliage (n.) / D. ease or relief of pain
_____ingenuous (adj.) / E. able to express oneself effectively
_____invective (n.) / F. painful feeling of sorrow for wrongdoing
_____jetty (n.) / G. bitter verbal attack
_____jubilantly (adv.) / H. mass of leaves
_____obstreperous (adj.) / I. a powder used as a laxative
_____palliation (n.) / J. joyfully or triumphantly
_____philippic (n.) / K. wharf
_____remorseful (adj.) / L. violent verbal attack

Focus Box

Chapter 9
Atticus’s decisions / “Maycomb’s usual disease”
Finch’s Landing / Christmas
Aunt Alexandra / Frances
Chapters 10 and 11
Children’s changing view of Atticus / Title of the novel
Tim Johnson / Mrs. Dubose
Physical courage / Real courage

Study Guide Questions

1. Cecil Jacobs taunts Scout in Chapter 9. What does Scout learn when she relates her experience to Atticus?

2. Why has Atticus taken Tom Robinson’s case?

3. What happens during the family visit to Finch’s Landing at Christmas?

4. What is Scout punished for, and why does Scout say Uncle Jack isn’t being fair?

5. What creature does Atticus forbid the children to shoot? What explanation does Miss Maudie give for this command?

6. Who is Tim Johnson? How does he die?

7. What skill does Atticus reveal to his children?

8. When Jem destroys Mrs. Dubose’s camellia bushes, how is he punished?

9. What does Scout eventually realize about the alarm clock at Mrs. Dubose’s house?

10. What does Atticus tell the children after Miss Dubose’s death?

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