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Analysis Of The Harvest Gypsies By Steinbeck

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The bare land of California faced severe drought under the scorching sun, precious crops are harvest ready, scarcely diminishing without any growers around. However, a group of benevolent nomads approaches this dying land in hopes of living among it and healing it. Migrants from all around the world travel across countries, borders, and vast terrain. California, being a famous location today in the United States, is also set to be the heaviest drought environment with very large farmlands. This land would have deteriorated, but it was healed in the most mundane way, agricultural farming. Steinbeck introduces the mere impact that these migrants they’ve had in the country, but in most cases, it’s not seen like that. In “The Harvest Gypsies”, Steinbeck writes a deliberate passage to assure that these migrants are not of the country's problem. He denounces prejudice views among them, includes the issues they face with the law, incorporates their unprecedented arrival, and alludes California’s importance in migrant labor for agricultural economics. Near the beginning of the passage, Steinbeck’s technique is to use specific word choices to imply that most residential views on migrants/gypsies are prejudice. They are often a part of: “This hatred of the stranger that occurs in the whole range of human history”(2). Steinbeck uses ‘hatred of the stranger’ to tap into a sort of knowledge of history. Aside from his, he shares a view in which they are often seen as “ignorant and

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