preview

Symbolism In The Grapes Of Wrath

Decent Essays

John Steinbeck’s text, The Grapes of Wrath narrates the struggles of the Joads as they join people from Oklahoma in a mass migration westward (Steinbeck, 1). When Tom Joad is released from prison after serving for four years, he goes back to his home in Oklahoma. Joad meets with Jim Casy, a former preacher who gave up preaching after he believes that all parts are holy even the sinful ones (Steinbeck, 12). Casy has the new belief in equality among people. When Tom Joad gets home, he finds the surrounding farms deserted where he discovers that everybody was moving out of the farms. Joad and his family, Ma and Pa Joad pick up their possessions and head of to the promised land of California (Steinbeck, 13). While Steinbeck writes about the political and emotional issues of the Great Depression, the characters in the book display a great deal of religiousness and spirituality. When the characters feel desperate and ambiguous about their future, they turn to religion and prayer for hope. Steinbeck uses religious symbolism throughout the “The Grapes of Wrath” through the different stages, characters, and strange occurrences to explore the lives of the Joads family.
The book has numerous stages, each of which has a symbol the theme of religion. In the start, the Joads are living in Dust Bowl, somewhere in the Midwest. The Midwest was affected by severe dust storms during the Great Depression (Steinbrecher 45). The Dust Bowl is a representation of the desert such as in the Bible

Get Access