Gender stereotypes are demonstrated when Aunt Alexandra tells Scout to be more lady-like. In the novel, “Aunt Alexandra [is] fanatical on the subject of [her] attire ... Aunt Alexandra’s vision of [Scout’s] deportment involved playing with small stoves, tea sets, and wearing [an] Add-A-Pearl necklace” (Lee 92). Through Scout’s relationship with her Aunt Alexandra and their thoughts on how girls should act, this scene shows gender stereotypes. After all, Aunt Alexandra and the rest of Maycomb believe all girls should be feminine when in reality, she is not as feminine as everyone wants her to be making people think of her as an outsider. …show more content…
In chapter 9, Scout celebrates Christmas and after dinner, Francis says how he is going to learn how to cook, causing Scout to laugh at him and say, “Boys don’t cook” (93). Although most stereotypes in To Kill a Mockingbird focuses on females, this one is different from the rest. In this case Scout laughs at the fact that Francis is going to learn how to cook making a stereotype that only women and girls can cook. What Scout does not realize is that it is both important for both genders to cook so that men are not seen as lazy people who are always waiting around for their