Poetic Justice in Jurassic Park
Poetic justice is an outcome in which evil is punished and kindness is rewarded. This can be found in Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton, a story in which a crazed scientist, John Hammond, assembles a team of top scientists to recreate extinct dinosaurs to use as attractions at his amusement park. In Jurassic Park, Ed Regis, John Hammond, and Dennis Nedry are perfect examples of poetic justice and are rightly punished.
One character to suffer from poetic justice is John Hammond, the owner of InGen. Throughout Jurassic Park, John Hammond is deceptive, selfish, and misleading. His actions are immoral because, although what he does isn’t very serious, it could have gotten worse over time and he may have lied in serious situations. For example, if Jurassic Park had ever been sued, he likely would have falsely stated that no one had ever died from the dinosaurs he helped create. As John Hammond and Gennaro are conversing, Gennaro begins to think about Hammond and how he
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Dennis Nedry is deceptive, sneaky, and a liar, which could lead to him getting in serious trouble if he continues to lie. He, too, has to die before he does something serious. After shutting down the power at the park, Nedry hurries to the deserted fertilization room and pulls out a rack of small tubes of embryos and, “Nedry quickly took two of each, slipping them into the shaving cream can” (176). Undoubtedly, Nedry deserves to die, for he stole from InGen and attempted to spy for BioSyn. Prior to leaving, Nedry had stolen embryos for InGen’s rival company. Nedry suffers a just punishment by causing his own death, for if he hadn’t turned off the power he would have been able to notice that he was entering the dilophosaur enclosure and wouldn’t have died. Because John Hammond, Ed Regis, and Dennis Nedry all prove to be antagonists, they all suffer poetic