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Similarities Between Shawshank Redemption And Just Mercy

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Throughout the movie, The Shawshank Redemption, and Bryan Stevenson’s novel, Just Mercy, a theme of censorship is evident. Such is seen in the way prisoners are killed or threatened to be in order for them not to say things, the way prisoners and those related to the case are paid in order not to talk, and the way those seen as guilty prior to telling their side of things fully get pushed to the side, lacking the ability to self-advocate. In censorship, justice is denied of a person or group of people through the use of a violation of rights established through the use of death, money and blackmail, and the movement of prisoner testimony to the side. In the film adaptation of The Shawshank Redemption, all of the above ways of censorship are seen. For instance, Tommy is the prisoner who is killed when he is viewed as a threat. He holds information that could set Andy Dufresne, the main protagonist of the movie, free from prison. The guards need Andy because he does their taxes for them and monetary transactions, so they kill Tommy off prison grounds in order to silence him. The power of silence is clearly seen here in how heavy its importance is for so many lives involved, a theme developed in both resources with a deafening, heart-wrenching hold. The second way that censorship is seen is through the use of prisoners being paid off to compromise their morality for the benefit of the guards. Whenever Andy is warned to continue doing Warden Norton’s “dirty work” for him by

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