live as finch

Abagail 2022-03-20 09:01:13

It doesn't have much to do with the plot. If you think of it, and you can't control it, just write it down.

I have been thinking about how a pure intellectual should get along with this society? Is it to follow the trend in the undercurrents of society or to fight to the end so that life can only become a corner? The father Fincher in the middle interprets the way of life of an honest intellectual under the surging social undercurrents.

Life is far less simple and direct than children think. It is not the freedom and dream that young people yearn for. What a good intellectual can do is to be like a child, not to despair of the future, and not to over indulge in the dreams of youth, namely: perceptual thinking, rational life. So in the play, from the perspective of a little girl, the father is a good father who can explain anyone and everything.
Don't be ostentatious. A person who flaunts his only little advantage everywhere is not an intellectual at all. At the moment, it is an era of talent show and show off. Even children are not immune to being forced to master a so-called specialty, some programs that slander their ignorance and show their ugliness. , There are still a group of people in the seriously ill society, thinking calmly and acting independently. When dangers appear, when the bricks are helpless, the weak intellectuals will be like Finch in the play, holding up their guns, and surpassing the police. End a danger outside the scope of the X-detection ability.
Principles. I believe that the intersection between man and society is caused by the philosophy that man has derived from his own life for many years (not a philosophy, but there is no other word to describe it, it is a kind of cognition of social feedback by man) and the difference in social values. Contradiction. When everyone is on the wrong side, as an intellectual, you must have the courage to stand on the weak but correct side, and this is the most basic criterion for being an intellectual. ps: The court debate section in the play, the section where Vinci guards the prison alone, the rhythm is well grasped, a good movie is like a river, the plot is slow and urgent, the ending may be surging like an estuary, or it flows into the ground slowly and flatly , After many years, it is full of momentum.
The people in the dormitory have all returned from the Internet cafe. I’m not in the mood, so let’s stop here. I don’t count as a comment. I just talk about my feelings. Well, a good man, a representative of intellectuals----finch.

10.29 21: 22

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Extended Reading

To Kill a Mockingbird quotes

  • Tom Robinson: I can't use my left hand at all. I got it caught in a cotton gin when I was twelve years old. All my muscles were tore loose.

  • [testifying]

    Tom Robinson: Well, I said I best be goin', I couldn't do nothin' for her, an' she said, oh, yes I could. An' I asked her what, and she said to jus' step on the chair yonder an' git that box down from on top of the chifforobe. So I done like she told me, and I was reachin' when the next thing I know she... grabbed me aroun' the legs.

    [a murmur erupts in the courthouse]

    Tom Robinson: She scared me so bad I hopped down an' turned the chair over. That was the only thing, only furniture 'sturbed in the room, Mr. Finch, I swear, when I left it... Mr. Finch, I got down off the chair, and I turned around an' she sorta jumped on me. She hugged me aroun' the waist. She reached up an' kissed me on the face. She said she'd never kissed a grown man before an' she might as well kiss me. She says for me to kiss her back.

    [Tom shakes his head, re-living the ordeal with his eyes half-closed]

    Tom Robinson: And I said, Miss Mayella, let me outta here, an' I tried to run. Mr. Ewell cussed at her from the window and said he's gonna kill her.