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Grapes Of Wrath By Steinbeck

John Steinbeck shows the readers many themes in “The Grapes of Wrath”. One of the most apparent is as Steinbeck stated, “The Joads passage through a process of education for the heart. ” Many characters in “The Grapes or Wrath” exhibit this theme, but it is valiantly apparent in the actions of the Joads as a family, Tom, Casy, and Rose of Sharon. Although each person in the Joad family is a separate individual, the family often acts as thought it were one person. As one might expect the experiences they incur change the family personality.

At the end of the book the Joads have lost their family identity, but they’ve replaced it with something equally worthy: they’ve found kinship with other migrant families. The Joads merge with the Wainwrights and the Wilsons, because each family needed the other and the fragmented family becomes whole again. The members don’t share last names, but they give support to each other in the form of food, blankets, a kind word, medicine, advice, and even love. As Casy says, “nobody has an individual soul, but everybody’s just got a piece of a great big soul.

By opening their hearts the Joads transformed into members of the universal family. Rose of Sharon, the eighteen year old daughter goes through a miraculous transformation of the heart as the journey progresses. When the Joads first begin their torrid journey Connie, Roses husband, and Rose set themselves apart from the mundane matters that occupy the rest of the family. They focus solely on the baby and dwell in the future instead of the present. They dream of the house they’ll buy for the baby in California, about the car they’ll drive, and about Connie’s schooling and ob.

When the going gets tough, Connie abandons his young wife, which may have been the turning point in Roses life. As time the birth approaches, Rose of Sharon does a surprising thing for someone in her delicate state, as she insists on picking cotton with the rest of her family. After a few days the baby is born dead and she seems relieved to know that she won’t have to raise a child in awesome poverty. Suffering through childbirth has perhaps opened her eyes. Throughout the book we have seen her concerned almost exclusively with herself and her problems.

Now she looks out at the world and turns completely about. In an act of extreme charity, she suckles a dying man with the milk of human kindness. Rose of Sharon discovers that everybody must be treated as family if they are to endure. It’s a message of love, which Rose of Sharon powerfully dramatizes for us in a barn. Jim Casy, one of the three most important characters in the Grapes of Wrath only appears in about one third of the book, yet we rarely forget him. Although Casy was never a Joad, even Tom had stated he’s close enough to be a Joad.

Casy, a former preacher, retreats from organized religion because hypocrisy and a weakness for women have forced him to reexamine his beliefs. He no longer believes in the individual, but strongly believes that “all men got one big soul everybody’s a part of. ” In Hooverville, Casy at last gets his chance to practice what he has started to preach. Tom trips the deputy sheriff who wants to arrest Floyd, an innocent man. Casy joins the fray and knocks the man out with a kick to the neck. When the sheriff returns to haul Tom to jail, Casy volunteers to go in Tom’s place: “Somebody got to take he blame… n’ I ain’t doin’ nothin’ but set aroun’. ” Months later we run into Casy again. Out of jail, he has begun to organize the workers, and in fact, he leads the strike at Hooper Ranch. He has translated his love for people into an effort to show them that their strength lies in collective action. Casy devotes his life to the union movement, and later gives it. In effect, Casy sacrifices himself so that others may be better off. Tom Joad, the most important character in the “Grapes of Wrath”, is an individual who realizes the importance of having a heart.

Tom has a quick temper, he killed a man in a drunken brawl, speaks harshly to the truck driver who gives him a lift; scolds the one-eyed man for feeling self-pity; and tells off the fat man who runs the filling station. Tom doesn’t despise each man, but only because each feels defeated by life’s hardships. Tom gives them all a brutally frank pep talk, as though he wants to get them moving again. Tom can’t just throw up his hands and walk away from problems, and he doesn’t want to see others do that either. As the Joads wander around California, Tom meets more good people who eep up the increasingly difficult struggle to live a decent life.

From then on, Tom follows in Casy’s footsteps. His concerns extend beyond himself and his family. They now include all downtrodden people. He feels a calling to help in any way he can. Casy’s violent death probably hastens Tom’s decision to work for the welfare of all poor people. As he says to Ma just before he leaves the family forever, “I’ll be aroun’ in the dark, I’ll be ever’where–wherever you look. Wherever they’s a fight so hungry people can eat, I’ll be there. Wherever they’s a cop beatin’ up a guy, I’ll be there. ” Tom may end up ead, like Casy, but there is no doubt that he’ll go down swinging.

When we look at the theme of the education of the heart we can realize that these characters didn’t start the journey with the belief that their a part of a great big soul. We can see and realize the gradual yet dramatic transformation of these three characters. Casy lives and dies for others, and at the end Tom will walk in Casy’s footsteps. Rose of Sharon soon after follows as she offers her milk to a stranger, she wears an enigmatic smile, suggesting that she, too, has discovered the joy that comes from opening the heart.

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StudyBoss » Grapes Of Wrath By Steinbeck

Grapes Of Wrath By Steinbeck

The Grapes of Wrath: The Purpose of the Interchapters – Sara Stark Initially, I found the interchapters to be annoying, interruptions to the story. It was only when I realized the point in having the interchapters that I understood that not only did they not interrupt the story, but they added to it tremendously. The interchapters provide indirect comments or general situations which suggest something about the personal tragedies of the main characters.

These comments and situations help give the reader an understanding of what the characters are going through by either showing metaphorically their present or future triumphs nd struggles or explaining the history of the period that they lived in. Chapter three is an interchapter. It describes a concrete highway that a land turtle struggled to cross. The turtle was finally almost there when it was hit by a truck and its shell was chipped and it was thrown on its back. The turtle had to struggle even hard but it did get going again.

This chapter represented the continual struggle of that the Joads would have to face throughout the entire story. Throughout the novel the Joads meet many hardships. They are forced to leave their home, lose family members such as the grandparents and Noah, work for low wages, and suffer from hunger floods and cruel prejudices in California. But, just as the turtle refused to be swayed from his purpose so will the Joads. Chapter five is an interchapter that discusses a tractors hired by banks or a corporations that would come to the land and plow through it, destroying everything in its path.

The chapter is an abstract conflict between the tenant farmer and the banks and shows the pain of a tenant farmer upon leaving the land that was settled by their grandfather. The tenant farmer was so upset that he threatened to shoot the driver . Another chapter describes a tenant farmer who has to leave and is cheated into paying to much for a car. Chapter nine describes the generalized families who must sell their sentimental goods at absurdly low prices. These chapters present the situations which the Joads come across very soon.

The Joads have to leave their land and sell all their things. Pa dreads telling Ma, in chapter ten, the price he sold their things for. Grandpa threatens to kill the tractor driver who was plowing their land just like the tenant farmer who Steinback described. The Joads had to buy a used car in order to go to California. The interchapters provided general social situations which Joads had to face. Interchapters nineteen and twenty one the development of land ownership in California.

Chapter nineteen explains how the Americans took California from the Mexicans and people known as “squatters” acquired lots of land and thought of it as their own. They hired people to work the land and became great owners. The problem was that many people from Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas began to arrive and the owners didn’t want them to become “squatters” so they hated them and called them “Okies”. These owners cut wages in order to pay policemen to guard and rotect their property.

In the next chapter, the Joads are called Okies and a young man explains to Tom that the people are afraid that the Okies will get organized if they stay in one place for long enough so they push them around. This man also explains how no one can get people together to organize because the cops will arrest whoever starts up. Chapter twenty one describes how the people with small jobs in California are afraid of the Okies because they don’t want to lose their jobs. The big companies could make wages very low because people were starving and would work for low wages.

The following chapter explains how Tom met Timothy Wallace who told him that he would only have his job for a couple of days and his wages were being cut. The interchapters describe general situations and the chapters after them explain how that particular situation affects or will affect the Joads. The reader can learn many details about the hardships that the Joads went through by reading about the hardships of the migrant workers as a whole. By certain metaphors, like the turtle, that Steinback used in the interchapters we can learn about the nature and the struggle of the Joads throughout the novel.

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