To Kill a Mockingbird
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Is Atticus Finch a hero?



To call him a hero one should follow some litterary criteria for this term.
Personal opinion: What he did was heroic, most lawyers would not have taken the burden, even though it was their job.



He takes the hard, principled road in several instances throughout the book, refusing to stoop to the level of his antagonists. He quietly has the respect of many of the townsfolk, and stands up for his principles even facing an angry mob. He uses words instead of violence and his story seems to fit a typical literary heroes journey.
Whether you decide to call him a hero or simply a thoughtful, hard-working Father figure. You should decide what a hero is first then objectively measure Atticus and see if his acts in the novel live up to your estimation of what a hero is. I imagine that is the way he would want to be examined for the mantle of Hero.



You should really read the conversation Atticus has with his brother, Jack, after the Christmas party at their sister's house. Atticus talks about the case with Jack and what is to come. He also talks about the case, if I remember correctly, after Jem destroys Mrs. Dubose's garden. Finally, I'd read the pages directly after Tom Robinson is convicted and the chapter following (including Miss Maudie's take on the situation).
Those parts of the book show what Atticus was thinking regarding the trial and what others thought. Looking at that would help you develop your own thoughts.
Good luck.
Those parts of the book show what Atticus was thinking regarding the trial and what others thought. Looking at that would help you develop your own thoughts.
Good luck.

In my eyes, I see Atticus as a hero, because he put his life on the line to help another human being, for no other reason than it was the right thing to do.



Of course he is.It was Gregory Peck!

Did you think Atticus was a hero, did he try abd make a difference for civil rights or was he just a man d..."
Atticus Finch was truly heroic because he accepted a job that no one else wanted and then proceeded to do the job to the best of his ability. He knew full well the cost it would have for himself and his family but he did what was ethical and morally right. He was a wonderful role model for his children.


Did you think Atticus was a hero, did he try abd make a difference for civil rights or was he just a man d..."
You might want to read Mockingbird, a biography of Harper Lee, for research. Her real father wasn't quite as great as Atticus, I'm afraid.





You said it was his job to defend Tom Robinson, which it was, but Atticus went against the majority of the public when he decided to defend the man whole heartedly and BELIEVED Tom was innocent.
Atticus Finch didnt seem like the type of guy who would want to be hero. He seemed like he was just doing his job. He was doing what he thought wwas right. he could be played off as a hero though.
I don't think "heroes" know that they are being heroes at the time. I completely agree with Anna above, that Atticus was an honest man who knew the difference between right and wrong, and tried to bring up his kids the same in a world of muddy values. Maybe we might call him a hero, but he would not have though himself one.

That being said, I think we are so inundated with Super-heroes in modern literature and media, we often confuse the two, and our expectations are influenced by that.


"We met a number of actors for Mr Collins and each played it in a different way. One actor came in and played him as Tony Blair! Tom came in and you always want someone to surprise you, to not play it as you specifically imagined.
He came in and played him as this weird little guy who couldn’t quite manage to communicate in the way that he wanted to, and couldn’t understand why not everyone respected him as much as he respected himself. They didn’t take him seriously and he’d tried all his life to be taken seriously, and I thought that was exciting and something I hadn’t seen. It surprised me, and I liked to be surprised."
I thought Tom did a fantastic job as Mr. Collins. He was a pitiful creature who somehow, creeps the nerves.
The whole movie was perfect in casting, really!











I haven't read it, or seen the movie, for years, either, but I remember thinking that that town desperately needed a lot of feathers ruffled long before this particular court case came up.



This may seem like I am splitting hairs but I believe someone before me did say it best. He was a great role-model but not exactly a hero, even if what he did could be seen as heroic. There are reluctant heroes, still I think that if Atticus had tried to draw attention to the injustice I could see him as a hero but instead he wasn't trying to teach anyone anything he was only trying to defend Tom!

"The reluctant hero is typically portrayed either as an ordinary person thrust into extraordinary circumstances which require him to rise to heroism... the reluctant hero does not initially seek adventure or the opportunity to do good..."
Atticus wasn't out walking among the disenfranchised looking for a legal case that might change his society. It came to him, and in doing his job he became a hero.
A true hero these days is likely to be called a trouble-maker. The Freedom Riders were heroes. Come to think of it, the details of the book are fuzzy after all this time, but doesn't this make the defendant more of a real hero of the story?
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Did you think Atticus was a hero, did he try abd make a difference for civil rights or was he just a man doing a job?