loans by banks and investors‚ the lack of high-growth new industries‚ and growing wealth inequality‚ all interacting to create a downward economic spiral of reduced spending‚ falling confidence‚ and lowered production. THE DUST BOWL The Dust Bowl‚ was a period of severe dust storms causing major ecological and agricultural damage to American lands from 1930 to 1936. The phenomenon
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and hatred related to the dust bowl and the great depression times. Steinbeck strived for this novel to be his best he had ever written. He spent months researching how the people were treated during these times in order to enhance the emotions of the times. He desired to make sure that every detail he put in the book was true and relatable to the times. Steinbeck went to California in the late 1930’s. While he was there he decided to write this novel about the dust bowl and great depression
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fathom; one should also know that the residents of the southern plains states had to deal with more than just depression. Ongoing droughts saw to it that crops failed year after year during these times causing dust storms to become quite ubiquitous. This was better known as the Dust Bowl. The Grapes of Wrath is a fictional story that casts and outlines as much truth about the Great Depression as Uncle Tom’s Cabin exposed the deplorable realities of slavery in the e1800’s. John Steinbeck’s book
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the Great Depression began to change everything people had grown old knowing‚ and it forced everyone to deal with dramatic alterations to their lives that left them with no options except acceptance. America then witnessed the mass migration of farmers from the Dust Bowl out to the west towards California and the required intervention by the federal government in stepping up and taking responsibility for the socioeconomic issues plaguing the disintegrating nation. This was profoundly illustrated throughout
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the family who moved out west were the Joads. During 1930’s‚ Midwest was hit hard by the great-depression. And to aggravate these effects dust bowls were sprawling all over Midwest. The Joads were immensely devastated by these conditions in ‘The Grapes of Wrath’ by John Steinbeck. First the author shows how the all over Midwest families were the target of dust bowls because the land was over used and crops weren’t rotated. Because people couldn’t grow their own crops‚ they had to borrow money from lenders
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California migrants (edsitement). Chapter One shows the transition into the Dust Bowl and the farmers’ responses to these changes. Chapter 29 shows the changes caused by the California winter rains and the migrants’ responses to these changes. Steinbeck uses parallelism and inversion in his first and last intercalary chapters in order to emphasize the cyclical nature of the problems and the resilience of migrants during the Dust Bowl. Steinbeck introduces in Chapter One the initial problems faced by farmers
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John Steinbeck went into writing about the Dust Bowl migration feeling that he had the responsibility to convey the problem correctly. The Grapes of Wrath not only works as a call to action in favor of the masses of migrant workers that were forced to live in poverty‚ but also expresses several other messages about mankind itself. Steinbeck uses powerful imagery‚ unique and suspenseful structure‚ dramatic tone‚ and compelling symbolism to effectively squeeze a mountain of an issue into pages of text
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Sabrina Chiodo Nosic‚ Z CHC2O1 April 2nd 2015 1920s and 1930s Scrapbook Activity Roaring 20s 1) Five new products that emerged during the 1920s are upright electric toaster‚ dishwasher‚ table lamp‚ hair dryer‚ and egg cooker. These products are all electrical and technology-based. 2) a) Five examples of slang from the 1920s are cat’s meow (very sharp)‚ all wet (out to lunch)‚ dogs (shoes)‚ bunk (nonsense)‚ spiffy (fashionable). b) Three examples of these slang words used in sentences are‚ “You’re
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References: Steinbeck‚ John. The Grapes of Wrath. New York: Viking‚ 1939. Print. Woolf‚ Virginia. A Room of One ’s Own. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich‚ 1989. Print. Mumford and Sons. Dust Bowl Dance. N.d. CD.
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his lager message. In the novel’s opening pages Steinbeck laces the text with recurring words‚ illustrating the setting and tone. He repeats words like “red country”‚ “dust”‚ “boiling”‚ and “raw stinging” to make the reader feel as if they are in the scorched and dust covered setting of Oklahoma in the midst of the Dust Bowl. He also utilizes recurring words like “pale”‚ “dark”‚ and “grey” as a sort of way to engrain into the reader’s minds with the depressing and utterly tragic tone the introduction
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