In chapter thirty of The Grapes of Wrath‚ John Steinbeck highlights the most destitute moment of the Joad family during their exodus to California and the transformation of many characters. Steinbeck opens the chapter by describing the flood is taking over the boxcar. Pa urges other men to build an embankment because Rose of Sharon begins to experience labor. While the men work on building the embankment‚ the cotton tree is uprooted‚ cascades into the embankment and destroys it. Steinbeck continues
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A very common theme shown throughout the book Grapes of Wrath is group work. Basically staying together and working through hard times. This can relate to our very comon lifes of going through something hard but knowing you’ll always have someone by your side. Like family or very close friends. There is a part in the book where Tom and and his family travel off to california and pass by there old house and walk in looking at the old pictures hanging on the empty open walls. The family then starts
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In The Grapes of Wrath‚ Ma is without doubt the one who holds the Joad family together because she is the primary caretaker of everybody in the family and constantly pushes them until they achieve work and suitable living conditions. Ma is the primary caretaker of everyone‚ but a few instances stand out more than others. Though Ma is sassy to her pregnant
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persuades him to depart from the family. They also have a structure in which Tom‚ Pa‚ Al‚ usually make family decisions and the eventually the final verdict is given to Ma. Overall‚ family is suppose to take care of each other when in time of need and work as one rather than individuals. Adaptation (Positives and Negatives) With the family traveling together‚ it’s evident that migration is a change that is supported and has to be overcome. And although the outcome of migration is suppose
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Adapting a novel into a film is difficult‚ the director must analyze the book and pick what he/she wants to include in the film. In the film adaptation of The Grapes of Wrath‚ director John Ford attempts to turn 455 pages of the novel into a movie lasting no more than 2 hours. The first part of the film follows the book fairly closely and is very effective. However‚ the second half and the ending in particular are significantly different from the book and is not as effective. The first part of the
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every way to break their spirits and push them down to the point where they had no spirit left to defy their masters or secede from their authority. But the slaves did not succumb to their oppressors‚ the slaves did the opposite and gave their masters wrath and together they rose up past the hardships‚ together they rose up from there bondage and captivity‚ together they rose up from there drudgery and rebelled. As the owners rules on slave life got harsher to scare them from escaping‚ the slaves got
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The importance of the "we" theme throughout the novel is demonstrated many times in Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath. The Joads were only capable of making it to California‚ and continue living on‚ by sticking together. Ma Joad said many times that it was okay to lose anything besides the family that everything would always be all right as long as they still had each other. Casy had also reinforced this theme by being "a man of the people‚" throughout the story. After his time in the wilderness‚ he had
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have to find what best fosters the flowering of our humanity in this contemporary life‚ and dedicate ourselves to that.” The role of human in this world is to help make life better for others. Ideas and actions taken by the characters in The Grapes of Wrath prove the role of humans to help each other is a necessity. Jim Casy is a radical philosopher and a unifier of men‚ he presumably assumes the role of Jesus Christ in the novel. In the beginning‚ Casy is always uncertain of how to use his talents
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Diction essay In The Grapes of Wrath‚ John Steinbeck’s use of diction builds the foundation of his overall theme; the cruelties men impose on other men. His use of repetition‚ low-style word choice‚ and the power of connotation all reinforce 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
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The novel‚ The Grapes of Wrath‚ by John Steinbeck was published in 1939 and seemingly took place in the time during the great depression. After reading the book‚ I can think that the main point of the novel would be to show the impact of a community. In the novel‚ we see all of the hardship the people go through; however‚ in the sections when the people of kin come together as one‚ it seems that things turn up. Without one‚ they seem at the mercy of the others around them. It just would seem that
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