Rainbow Rowell Injustice

698 Words2 Pages

Martin Luther King Jr. once said, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere”. According to Martin Luther King Jr., if there is injustice anywhere, it affects the chance of having justice. Eleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell is about a girl who comes from a family with an abusive stepfather who recently kicked her out of the house for a year. On the first day of school, she takes the bus to school and is immediately bullied by everyone except for a boy named Park. As time goes by, they start developing feelings for each other and fall in love. Thesis: Throughout the book, Eleanor is faced with injustice and is forced to respond to it in various ways. This is shown by how she deals with bullies, comforts her siblings during a …show more content…

After Eleanor returns from gym class, she finds that her locker is covered in pads. One would think that she would react with anger or break down in tears, but, “Instead, she walked past the girls, with her chin as high as she could manage, and methodically peeled the pads off her locker. Eleanor cried a little bit, but she kept her back to everybody so there wouldn’t be a show” (Rowell 55). At school, the people bully Eleanor because of her physical appearance. Instead of getting revenge, she takes the high road and does not stoop down to their level. This way, she is able to show the bullies that their injustice does not affect her. This response to injustice makes her very mature and helps her overcome many other …show more content…

After Eleanor realizes that Richie knows that she has been dating Park and he has been the one writing obscene notes on her textbook, she feels that, “She had to hide. She had to get away from him... ‘I’ve got to get out of here’” (282-283). In order to feel safe, she decides to leave to go to Minnesota to live with her aunt and uncle. Although she knows that she would be leaving her siblings and mother, she does not want to risk staying any longer since he was last seen leaving the house in search of Eleanor. This makes the reader assume that he was on the lookout to severely punish Eleanor for lying to Richie’s face. After all the haunting messages that Richie has left on her textbook, she leaves in order to get justice and run away from the mental

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