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The Family In John Steinbeck's Grapes Of Wrath

Decent Essays

What is a family? It can be properly described as a group of people consisting of parents and children living together. Although, families are more than just parents and children living together. They are the people that love each other and sacrifice for each other, no matter what. In the novel, Grapes of Wrath written by John Steinbeck describes the Joad family living in through the Great Depression. This family travels together across the U.S. in order to find new jobs in a country where there are limited ones left. Throughout this story, the Joad family continues to model key roles that the standard family needs to follow to stay together. Steinbeck describes the roles of family as taking in and caring for people that are not family …show more content…

Although the Joad biological family is biological, their help and dedication to others creates a much larger family connected through friendship and charity. One of the greatest examples of the Joad family kindness is their travels with Ivy and Sairy Wilson. After lending their tent to the Joads and experiencing the Joad’s grandfather’s death, the two families decide to travel together. They can considered as one family, because they continuously support each other. Whether they are sharing food and goods or pooling money together, they continually fit the description of a caring family. Another good example of non-biological families bonding together is the entirety of chapter 17. The short chapter explains how all the migrant families traveling on Route 66 are slowing developing rules and polite ways to behave on the road. Some of these new means of enforcement included privacy of the tent, the hungry were fed, sons were able to court and daughters were courted, and more. These evolving rules are exemplifying that all these separate families are coming together as Steinbeck quotes, “twenty families became one family” (page …show more content…

An important example of this role can be seen when Tom leaves the state with his family while he’s still on parole. His parole states he cannot leave the state or he’ll be put back in jail, but he knows that his family needs him so he stays. While the Wilsons stay with the Joads on the road, they eventually separate, because they know that if they stay, it’ll be even harder to sustain the entire family. Sairy was becoming ill and Ivy knew that if they stayed, the Joads would have a harder time making it to California, so they sacrificed their ride and belongings so that the Joads would make it to California. One of the most notable sacrifices was Pa leaving his farm and his home. Pa had lived in that house for decades and had so many memories along with the house. Although he knew that if he stayed there, the new farming machines would trample his family and they wouldn’t be able to make money. This would eventually lead to his family’s starvation and death. Therefore, Pa sacrificed his entire life’s work so his family would be able to thrive in the dying

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