Wednesday, November 6, 2019
Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck essays
Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck essays    The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck is both a historical and     literary depiction of the lives of California migrant workers who became     victims to the dry spells that plagued the Dust Bowl regions (Kansas,     Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado) during the 1930s.  The novel,     through the lead characters, Tom Joad and his family, Steinbeck illustrated     life of Oklahomans who migrated to California in search for work and     living.  However, the Joad family's life served as the  symbol'     representing all California migrant workers during the period.  This is     because the novel actually discusses the conflict between the California     migrant workers (protagonist) and the white American society (antagonist).     Moreover, the novel is also a display of conflict between poverty and     wealth, as American society shifts from being an agricultural to urban.     Conflict between the migrant workers and white Americans in California     stemmed from the threat that the migrants posed for the state's     inhabitants: the migration of people from the Dust Bowl regions led to     lesser opportunities for work and economic resources for them           Tom Joad, the main character of the novel, best represent the migrant     worker of the  30s, who was forced to leave his home for want of a better     life in California.  However, hopes for his family's good fortune in their     new life led to disillusionment when he witnessed the  sorry' state of     migrants in and the  ugliness' of California.  This realization surfaced as     they neared and arrived at the state: "Tom looked about the grimy tents,     the junk equipment, at the old cars, the lumpy mattresses out in the sun,     at the blackened cans on fire-blackened holes where the people cooked"     (286).  The inevitable conflict that discrimination among migrant workers     finally led to Tom's downfall, when he was (wrongfully) accused of killing     Casy.  His disillusionment and becoming a fugitive bui...     
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