Unjust Laws In Inherit The Wind

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Pressure to follow laws is often greater than the freedom to question unjust laws. In Inherit the Wind, Bertram Cates unintentionally challenges the authority of unjust laws by teaching Darwinism in a religious town. Drummond emphasizes that even though Cates feels wrong for violating a state law, the laws he violated are not necessarily fair (Lawrence and Lee 37). Therefore, the purpose of the novel is to demonstrate the importance of questioning teachings, rules, and authoritative figures.
Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee illustrate the importance of questioning amoral authoritative figures through Matthew Harrison Brady. Readers see how infatuated Brady is with image when he is “disturbed by the informality of the pose” for a photograph

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