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    has inspired the hearts of millions of readers about the Dust Bowl and the Great Depression, two of America’s greatest heartache. John Steinbeck’s, The Grapes of Wrath this captivating, realistic narrative explains the one of biggest migrations of men and women back in the 1930s during the Dust Bowl. The story is told of the Joads, a farm…

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    The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck is a very compelling and accurate book even though it 's fiction. This book follows a family from Oklahoma during the great depression and their journey to California in search of jobs. The Joads family is affected by atmospheric condition and the dust bowl. Some of the challenges the family faces because of this are drought, death, and job loss. First of all, atmospheric conditions and the dust bowl caused death. The dust bowl was caused because of the…

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    the Bible. The uniqueness of people to have no repeated DNA strands, no same fingerprints, and no like thoughts links to the formation of these different denominations and allows for the reading of literature to influence. John Steinbeck’s novel The Grapes of Wrath depicts yet another interpretation of the Bible for readers to see lived out in the setting of The Great Depression. The biblical leader of the Israelites, Moses, showed a strong connection to Rose of Sharon’s dead baby. In the…

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    In reference to Chapter 1, The Grape of Wrath by John Steinbeck I can feel and visualize the situation of the famers and their families. Their suffering and struggle living in a place full of dust. In the article John Steinbeck stated that "Men and women huddled in their houses, and they tied handkerchiefs over their nose when they went out and wore goggles to protect their eyes", in his quote it describe how difficult it was living in dry and dusty place were the only protection people can use…

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    “The Grapes of Wrath” is set in the Dust Bowl of Oklahoma. Tom Joad is being released from prison where he was serving four years for manslaughter. He meets a preacher, Jim Casy, who has given up his calling because he believes that he is as lost as his congregation and is not fit to lead anymore. Tom and Jim head to California to find Tom’s family who had left to find work. Tom eventually find his family and they set up in the migrant camps that are overcrowded and lacking food. They find out…

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    The Grapes of Wrath undoubtedly demonstrated the conflicts that American families endured on their journey from the Dust Bowl to California. This novel was written by John Steinbeck, a novelist and writer who witnessed the discrimination farmers had to tolerate on their migration to California. This gruesome journey caused misery, agony, regret among various families. Still, a majority of these families clung onto something crucial: their religion. The families prayed to God for their…

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    Today, most families are faced with hardships, but Jeannette Walls and John Steinbeck wrote some of the best examples of endurance in their novels The Glass Castle and The Grapes of Wrath. In The Glass Castle, Walls wrote about her childhood and problems that were unique to her family. Steinbeck wrote about a very common issue that tenant farmers faced during the dust bowl and Great Depression of the 1930’s. He wrote of a fictional family, the Joads. The Walls and Joad family both lived their…

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    There are a multitude of themes that can be acknowledged throughout the entirety of The Grapes of Wrath. One theme that I noticed to be prevalent in almost every chapter was the idea of joining together, putting aside differences, and cooperating, regardless of whether you were strangers. Supporting your fellow man seemed to recur again and again. This can be seen in the way all the characters in the story interact with each other. The Joad family begins their journey to California as a broken…

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    In The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck uses the unconventional, intercalary chapters in the structure of this novel. These intercalary chapters are a narrative technique in which Steinbeck informs the reader about the economic impact of the Great Depression upon the common farmers in the U.S. during that time. In chapter 11, Steinbeck uses the intercalary chapter technique to describe the incoming of the modern tractors and the effect this modernization had on the land the farmers had occupied.…

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    From Europe colonizing America to the Atlantic Slave Trade, migrations have been defining moments in world history-- the travels of the farmers depicted in John Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath are no exception. Steinbeck aims to detail the mass migration of Midwest farmers to the West during Dust Bowl of the 1930s for a worldwide audience. In this narrative a symbolic, classic piece of American literature is formed. The author expresses his sympathy and compassion for these weary travelers. Through…

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