Small Great Things

    by

    Picoult, Jodi

    Jodi Picoult’s Small Great Things (2016) explores themes of race, privilege, and justice through the story of Ruth Jefferson, an African American labor and delivery nurse accused of causing the death of a white supremacist couple’s newborn. The novel alternates perspectives between Ruth, the infant’s father Turk Bauer, and Ruth’s public defender Kennedy McQuarrie, revealing systemic racism and personal biases. Inspired by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s quote about doing “small things in a great way,” the narrative examines moral dilemmas and societal structures. The book has been praised for its thought-provoking examination of contemporary racial tensions and is being adapted into a film.

    The chap­ter depicts a piv­otal court­room scene where Kennedy McQuar­rie, Ruth Jef­fer­son­’s attor­ney, con­fronts the racial under­tones of the case head-on. After months of avoid­ing the top­ic, Kennedy bold­ly address­es the jury about sys­temic racism, forc­ing them to acknowl­edge the ele­phant in the room. Ruth, moved by Kennedy’s words, reflects on how her life has been shaped by these very issues, yet rec­og­nizes that the mes­sage car­ries more weight com­ing from Kennedy, a white woman. The moment is charged with emo­tion as Ruth strug­gles to artic­u­late her grat­i­tude, while Kennedy, in turn, thanks Ruth for the oppor­tu­ni­ty to speak these truths.

    The pros­e­cu­tor, Odette Law­ton, coun­ters Kennedy’s argu­ment by redi­rect­ing the focus to Ruth’s pro­fes­sion­al con­duct. She acknowl­edges the racial prej­u­dice Ruth faced but argues that Ruth failed to uphold her nurs­ing duties, pri­or­i­tiz­ing her anger over the infan­t’s care. Odette draws par­al­lels to her own expe­ri­ences with dis­crim­i­na­tion, empha­siz­ing that per­son­al griev­ances should not com­pro­mise pro­fes­sion­al respon­si­bil­i­ties. She paints Ruth as some­one who let her emo­tions over­ride her eth­i­cal oblig­a­tions, sug­gest­ing that Ruth’s actions—or inactions—directly con­tributed to the baby’s death, regard­less of the racial con­text.

    The ten­sion esca­lates as Odette accus­es Ruth of dis­hon­esty and mal­ice, con­trast­ing her with Turk Bauer, whose overt racism is at least trans­par­ent. Odette argues that Ruth’s momen­tary admis­sion of inter­ven­ing with the baby—after ini­tial­ly deny­ing it—reveals her unre­li­a­bil­i­ty. She dis­miss­es the defense’s focus on race as a dis­trac­tion from the core issue: Ruth’s alleged neg­li­gence. The pros­e­cu­tor’s clos­ing remarks under­score the irre­versible tragedy of the infan­t’s death, imply­ing that no amount of racial dis­course can absolve Ruth of blame.

    As the jury delib­er­ates, Ruth and Kennedy reflect on the tri­al’s emo­tion­al toll and uncer­tain out­come. Kennedy admits that her bold strat­e­gy may have jeop­ar­dized Ruth’s case, as jurors could be swayed by the emo­tion­al weight of the accu­sa­tions rather than the evi­dence. Ruth, how­ev­er, finds val­ue in hav­ing the truth spo­ken aloud, regard­less of the con­se­quences. The chap­ter ends on a somber note, with Ruth con­tem­plat­ing the pos­si­bil­i­ty of a lengthy prison sen­tence and the pro­found per­son­al trans­for­ma­tion she has under­gone through­out the ordeal.

    FAQs

    • 1. How does Kennedy McQuarrie’s courtroom strategy shift in this chapter, and why is this significant?

      Answer:
      Kennedy McQuarrie makes a pivotal strategic shift by directly addressing racial prejudice in court after months of insisting race didn’t belong in legal proceedings. She forces the jury to confront the “elephant in the room” by framing Ruth Jefferson’s actions within systemic racism (e.g., comparing patient reassignment to a McDonald’s customer avoiding a Black cashier). This is significant because, as Ruth reflects, the message carries more weight coming from Kennedy (a white woman) than it would from Ruth herself. The chapter highlights how privilege operates in advocacy—Kennedy’s identity grants her credibility to voice truths Ruth couldn’t effectively share.

      2. Analyze Odette Lawton’s rebuttal to Kennedy’s argument. How does she attempt to redirect the jury’s focus?

      Answer:
      Odette Lawton strategically reframes the case by separating the issue of racism from professional accountability. She acknowledges the prejudice in Marie Malone’s directive but insists Ruth’s alleged negligence—not systemic bias—is the true legal issue. Using her McDonald’s analogy, Odette argues Ruth failed to maintain professionalism (unlike Odette herself in her youth). She paints Ruth as equally “filled with hate” as Turk Bauer by citing Ruth’s emotional testimony about the baby, while dismissing Kennedy’s arguments as a “dog and pony show.” This redirects attention from institutional racism to individual culpability.

      3. What internal conflict does Ruth grapple with after the closing arguments, and what does this reveal about her character development?

      Answer:
      Ruth wrestles with the tension between moral vindication and legal consequences. While she values Kennedy’s truth-telling (“It was still worth hearing”), she recognizes the strategic risk—jurors may now perceive her as angry rather than wronged. Her reflection on jail time and the metaphor of being “forged in a crucible like steel” shows hardened resilience. Unlike her earlier naivety (referencing Liza Lott), Ruth now understands systemic injustice firsthand but refuses to be broken by it. This marks her transformation from a rule-following professional to someone who acknowledges complexity in justice.

      4. How does the chapter use juxtaposition to contrast Kennedy and Odette’s rhetorical approaches?

      Answer:
      The chapter contrasts the attorneys through their analogies and delivery. Kennedy uses visceral imagery (the “elephant” metaphor) to evoke empathy for Ruth’s lived experience, while Odette employs the McDonald’s story to emphasize cold professionalism. Kennedy’s tone is impassioned (“rousing cry for social justice”), whereas Odette’s is clinical (“not what we’re here for today”). Crucially, Odette mirrors Kennedy’s racial framing but subverts it—both use service-industry parallels, but Odette’s paints Ruth as unprofessional rather than victimized. This juxtaposition underscores how the same facts can be weaponized differently.

      5. Evaluate Ruth’s statement that “it was better for that baby to die than to grow up like his father.” How does this moment function in the narrative?

      Answer:
      This controversial line serves multiple purposes: 1) It provides Odette with ammunition to equate Ruth’s anger with Turk Bauer’s racism, weakening her “professional misconduct” defense; 2) It reveals Ruth’s raw humanity—unlike Odette’s polished McDonald’s anecdote, Ruth’s outburst shows unfiltered pain; 3) It crystallizes the novel’s central tension: Can systemic injustice justify individual moral compromises? The line haunts the jury precisely because it’s uncomfortably candid, contrasting with legal posturing. Ultimately, it challenges readers to sit with difficult questions about trauma, ethics, and redemption.

    Quotes

    • 1. “After months of telling me that race doesn’t belong in a court of law, Kennedy McQuarrie took the elephant in the room and paraded it in front of the judge. She squeezed it into the jury box, so that those men and women couldn’t help but feel the pinch.”

      This quote marks a pivotal moment where Kennedy, Ruth’s lawyer, directly addresses racial bias in court—something she had previously avoided. It highlights the tension between legal strategy and moral truth.

      2. “For the jurors to hear it, really hear it, it had to be said by one of their own.”

      Ruth reflects on the painful reality that her lived experiences of racism carry more weight when voiced by a white ally (Kennedy). This underscores the systemic inequity in whose testimony is deemed credible.

      3. “If you are going to say you are unnerved by how Turk Bauer is filled with hate, you must admit that Ruth, too, is filled with hate.”

      The prosecutor’s rebuttal equates Ruth’s anger at systemic racism with Turk Bauer’s white supremacist ideology, revealing how racism flattens nuance and weaponizes marginalized people’s emotions against them.

      4. “I have been forged in a crucible, like steel. And the miracle about steel is that you can hammer it so thin it’s stretched to its limit, but that doesn’t mean it will break.”

      Ruth’s metaphor captures her transformation through trauma—acknowledging the violence of systemic oppression while asserting her unbroken resilience. This reflects the chapter’s theme of survival under pressure.

      5. “‘It was still worth hearing,’ I tell Kennedy. She smiles a little. ‘It was worth saying.’”

      This quiet exchange between Ruth and Kennedy affirms the value of truth-telling despite potential consequences. It bookends the chapter’s tension between pragmatism and principle.

    Quotes

    1. “After months of telling me that race doesn’t belong in a court of law, Kennedy McQuarrie took the elephant in the room and paraded it in front of the judge. She squeezed it into the jury box, so that those men and women couldn’t help but feel the pinch.”

    This quote marks a pivotal moment where Kennedy, Ruth’s lawyer, directly addresses racial bias in court—something she had previously avoided. It highlights the tension between legal strategy and moral truth.

    2. “For the jurors to hear it, really hear it, it had to be said by one of their own.”

    Ruth reflects on the painful reality that her lived experiences of racism carry more weight when voiced by a white ally (Kennedy). This underscores the systemic inequity in whose testimony is deemed credible.

    3. “If you are going to say you are unnerved by how Turk Bauer is filled with hate, you must admit that Ruth, too, is filled with hate.”

    The prosecutor’s rebuttal equates Ruth’s anger at systemic racism with Turk Bauer’s white supremacist ideology, revealing how racism flattens nuance and weaponizes marginalized people’s emotions against them.

    4. “I have been forged in a crucible, like steel. And the miracle about steel is that you can hammer it so thin it’s stretched to its limit, but that doesn’t mean it will break.”

    Ruth’s metaphor captures her transformation through trauma—acknowledging the violence of systemic oppression while asserting her unbroken resilience. This reflects the chapter’s theme of survival under pressure.

    5. “‘It was still worth hearing,’ I tell Kennedy. She smiles a little. ‘It was worth saying.’”

    This quiet exchange between Ruth and Kennedy affirms the value of truth-telling despite potential consequences. It bookends the chapter’s tension between pragmatism and principle.

    FAQs

    1. How does Kennedy McQuarrie’s courtroom strategy shift in this chapter, and why is this significant?

    Answer:
    Kennedy McQuarrie makes a pivotal strategic shift by directly addressing racial prejudice in court after months of insisting race didn’t belong in legal proceedings. She forces the jury to confront the “elephant in the room” by framing Ruth Jefferson’s actions within systemic racism (e.g., comparing patient reassignment to a McDonald’s customer avoiding a Black cashier). This is significant because, as Ruth reflects, the message carries more weight coming from Kennedy (a white woman) than it would from Ruth herself. The chapter highlights how privilege operates in advocacy—Kennedy’s identity grants her credibility to voice truths Ruth couldn’t effectively share.

    2. Analyze Odette Lawton’s rebuttal to Kennedy’s argument. How does she attempt to redirect the jury’s focus?

    Answer:
    Odette Lawton strategically reframes the case by separating the issue of racism from professional accountability. She acknowledges the prejudice in Marie Malone’s directive but insists Ruth’s alleged negligence—not systemic bias—is the true legal issue. Using her McDonald’s analogy, Odette argues Ruth failed to maintain professionalism (unlike Odette herself in her youth). She paints Ruth as equally “filled with hate” as Turk Bauer by citing Ruth’s emotional testimony about the baby, while dismissing Kennedy’s arguments as a “dog and pony show.” This redirects attention from institutional racism to individual culpability.

    3. What internal conflict does Ruth grapple with after the closing arguments, and what does this reveal about her character development?

    Answer:
    Ruth wrestles with the tension between moral vindication and legal consequences. While she values Kennedy’s truth-telling (“It was still worth hearing”), she recognizes the strategic risk—jurors may now perceive her as angry rather than wronged. Her reflection on jail time and the metaphor of being “forged in a crucible like steel” shows hardened resilience. Unlike her earlier naivety (referencing Liza Lott), Ruth now understands systemic injustice firsthand but refuses to be broken by it. This marks her transformation from a rule-following professional to someone who acknowledges complexity in justice.

    4. How does the chapter use juxtaposition to contrast Kennedy and Odette’s rhetorical approaches?

    Answer:
    The chapter contrasts the attorneys through their analogies and delivery. Kennedy uses visceral imagery (the “elephant” metaphor) to evoke empathy for Ruth’s lived experience, while Odette employs the McDonald’s story to emphasize cold professionalism. Kennedy’s tone is impassioned (“rousing cry for social justice”), whereas Odette’s is clinical (“not what we’re here for today”). Crucially, Odette mirrors Kennedy’s racial framing but subverts it—both use service-industry parallels, but Odette’s paints Ruth as unprofessional rather than victimized. This juxtaposition underscores how the same facts can be weaponized differently.

    5. Evaluate Ruth’s statement that “it was better for that baby to die than to grow up like his father.” How does this moment function in the narrative?

    Answer:
    This controversial line serves multiple purposes: 1) It provides Odette with ammunition to equate Ruth’s anger with Turk Bauer’s racism, weakening her “professional misconduct” defense; 2) It reveals Ruth’s raw humanity—unlike Odette’s polished McDonald’s anecdote, Ruth’s outburst shows unfiltered pain; 3) It crystallizes the novel’s central tension: Can systemic injustice justify individual moral compromises? The line haunts the jury precisely because it’s uncomfortably candid, contrasting with legal posturing. Ultimately, it challenges readers to sit with difficult questions about trauma, ethics, and redemption.

    Note