Resistance and Intolerance in Chocolat Chocolat isn't only an eccentric sentiment set in an interesting French town fixated on a supernatural chocolate shop. It is far beyond that. It is an account of the juxtaposition of humankind and the ying and yang of life. It leaves the peruser with in excess of a hankering for chocolate. It leaves them thinking about their own ethics, qualities and biases and perhaps somewhat better prepared to consider those of others. Joanne Harris utilizes two restricted storytellers and a few scholarly strategies to introduce an investigation in moral relativism. Moral relativism is the reason that any view dependent on an ethical judgment is neither inherently right nor wrong; that ethical judgment just originates from the focal point through which it is seen and those perspectives are molded by a horde of components, for example, beneficial encounters, culture, convictions and family esteems. Resistance and prejudice are not good absolutes, yet rather are comparative with those convictions and social standards.