Hannah Kent, in her 2014 novel Burial Rites, and Joel Schumacher in his 1996 film A Time to Kill, both relay that minorities, when being judged for a crime, will always be subject to prejudice and discrimination. These ideas are portrayed by both texts predominantly through setting, symbols, and characterisation. The setting of each narrative gives an obvious indication as to the kind of oppression faced by the protagonists, and the point view and characterisation helps the audience to sympathise with this. However, despite this common thread in the narrative structure, symbols display that each account of such discrimination in the criminal justice system leads the protagonists to, ultimately, very different fates.…