Inherit the Wind

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    The Underlying Themes In Inherit the wind The play, Inherit the Wind by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee is narrated in Hillsboro during the 1920s. It takes place in a confined religious town that puts the “Word of God” before the townspeople. Through a trial that debates over a man’s freedom to think, citizens begin to think about what they believe in. In fact, the characters reveal themes that explains the importance of interpreting beyond the religion factors, respecting one regardless of their

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    In the play Inherit the Wind, Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee use a historic event and twist it into a believable fiction narrative that shows the fault of a small southern town. As it is presented, the play was written to be seen as a more meta commentary on the American people, and the trial was supposed to symbolize American thinking as a whole. The authors make clear that the trial is not only against the defendant; it is also striking the people of the setting. The fault displayed in the

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    Exploring the debate over creationism as opposed to evolutionism is a multifaceted and touchy undertaking. Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee’s Inherit the Wind examines this debate in the court case that is central to the work as well as in a short feud between two characters, Melinda and Howard. As this argument represents the trial that drives the work and is indicative of how the court case unfolds, it is a momentous interaction that furthers the message of the need for consideration of other

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    Inherit the Wind Inherit the Wind by Jerome Lawrence and Robert Edwin Lee is a fictionalized play on the Scopes Trial, formally known as the Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes. In July 21, 1925, a high school teacher was accused of violating the Butler Act. This act made it illegal to teach evolution in any state funded school. Although Scopes was unsure he taught evolution, he incriminated himself and was found guilty. The subject of the play reflects this event except Inherit the Wind holds

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    On a superficial level, Inherit the Wind is an attack on the constraints of religion, but upon closer inspection it communicates individual thought and intellectual growth as being mankind’s greatest miracles. By contrasting an idea with a cathedral, Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee draw attention to the sanctity of human thought (Lawrence Lee 59). Thought, despite its fragility, must be protected, for if humanity loses the freedom to think, humanity loses the ability to grow and wallows in the

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    Inherit the Wind, a play written by Robert E. Lee and Jerome Lawrence, is about the freedom to think. Which takes place in Heavenly Hillsboro, Tennessee, outside of Nashville, in 1955. A man named Bertram Cates, who is a school teacher for the Hillsboro high school, is one of the main characters. He was escorted to jail for teaching evolution. Henry Drummond, the man who is helping Cates to small town and the world that the right to think freely and teach differently is not harmful. The religious

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    to what they do not understand: after all, the most frightening aspects of life are those misunderstood. As humans open their mind, they allow themselves to produce free thought. Henry Drummond’s argument in Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee’s Inherit the Wind stating, “The man who has everything figured out is probably a fool... it takes a very smart fella to say ‘I don’t know the answer!” signifies man’s right to obtain free thought and to stray from narrow-mindedness (Lawrence and Lee 39). The argument

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    Inherit The Wind Quotes

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    In the play, Inherit the Wind by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee, the character of Bertram Cates causes the most amount of conflict and impact on his society. He teaches about evolution, so he starts the heated argument on his punishment, and how he impacted the people with his actions In the beginning of the play Inherit the Wind, the character of Cates causes much conflict by teaching to his class of students about Darwin’s theory of evolution in the little town of Hillsboro. Back when this

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    Truth In Inherit The Wind

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    dictionary defines truth as the real facts about something and a statement or idea that is true or accepted as true. Everyone’s truth is different and is created through different encounters and ways the person has perceived an idea. The movie Inherit the Wind discusses the meaning of truth and why nothing is truly true. Truth is a concept developed over time that changes based on new information or perceptions. I believe that your personal physiology has a great impact on your truths. If it was

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    Creationism or Evolutionism? God or Darwin? This is a topic that has been debated for many years. Jerome Lawrence and Robert Edwin Lee dared to search for the long-awaited answer. Lawrence and Lee wrote Inherit the Wind based off of the true events of the Scopes Monkey Trial. The authors used characters, such as Matthew Brady, Henry Drummond, and Reverend Brown, to develop a theme of an individual’s power to change society. Matthew Brady was able to change the actions of the society in Hillsboro

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