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
Quest is a method where a literary work is broken down into five simple components. The five aspect of Quest consists of a quester, a place to go, a stated reason to go, challenges and trials, and a real place to go. This method can be applied to a novel by John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath because many examples are peppered throughout the story.
The Grapes of Wrath was a depiction of life in the Great Depression, specifically in the areas the Dust Bowl affected. The Joad family represents the “Okies”, which were people who went west looking for jobs. They also showcase the unfortunate events that happened to millions of people during the Great Depression. The Joad’s land was taken away/plowed over by superintendent and the land agents. After the destruction of their home and land they head west, to California, in search of jobs. With the Californians only using the Okies for cheap labor and giving them poor living conditions, they didn’t receive the best reputation. The Californians were rude to the Okies and treating them how they did is because the Okies were taking their jobs and
For such a small word, “Family,” can mean so much. In a dictionary one may read family as people with common ancestors, but a true family is people who stick together and support one another at any cost. Both books, Night by Elie Wiesel, and, Unbroken, by Laura Hillenbrand display the theme of family relationships throughout the story.
In the American epic novel, The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck, there are pivotal and dynamic changes that occur in the various significant characters of Jim Casy, Ma Joad, and Tom Joad. Steinbeck specifically uses these characters to show their common realizations about all of humanity, in order to demonstrate his underlying meaning about the importance of people coming together, helping each other out, and surviving. Ma Joad illustrates this idea clearly when she speaks to Tom mid-way through the novel: “Why, Tom, we’re the people that live. They ain’t gonna wipe us out. Why we’re the people--we go on.” (350)
Throughout John Steinbeck’s novel The Grapes of Wrath, many concepts appear that were noted in How to Read Literature Like a Professor by Thomas C. Foster. However, the three chapters of Foster’s how-to guide that most apply to Steinbeck’s novel were “It’s All About Sex…,” “Every Trip is a Quest (Except When It’s Not),” and “It’s More Than Just Rain or Snow.” On more than one occasion these concepts are hidden within the book, and two of them actually seem somewhat linked together. After reading between the lines, The Grapes of Wrath has an extremely intricate plot and many ulterior meanings. Foster’s book helps to solve these meanings and make it so that the novel can be completely understood.
Each family has their own battles to face. Certain families may have greater battles than others. The Joad family and the Walls family face battles that will last a lifetime. Each family has certain characteristics and tactics that help them survive their difficulties in life. The Joad family encounters difficulties with nature and the government.
As can be seen in The Grapes of Wrath, the Joads are a very tight-knit family. Yet on their trip to California, they experience many losses and additions to their family. In general, Steinbeck's novel abides by the circle of life. When a birth occurs, a death follows, and when a death occurs, a birth follows. However, in The
During the Great Depression, many citizens faced an arduous lifestyle of unemployment. However, many people managed to entertain themselves by reading literature such as The Grapes of Wrath. John Steinbeck witnessed an injustice towards farmers during the Great Depression, and this inspired Steinbeck to present his perspective of the maltreatment to the open through The Grapes of Wrath. The fictional novel describes how unfortunate conditions, during the Great Depression, force an Oklahoma farmer family to travel to California in search for an easy life, job opportunities, and a bright future. John Steinbeck represented and connected his tones through his trope, making it an excellent read. In the novel, The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck
The Joads don't just lose family members, however. During their travels, they encounter people who gain the status of 'honorary family,' something almost unheard of
Similar to a cactus’ bloom in the heat of the desert, through adversity humanity prospers and processes. Society, as a whole, has experienced, at least once, hardships in their lifetime, and through these trying situations people acquire compassion. Being familiar with challenges, people more readily accepts the distress of others and offer required assistance during times of difficulty. Although adversity is seen as the creator of contempt and hatred because of its negative effects on mentality, adversity fosters compassion through the creation of empathy, morality, and association in a person with others in a calamity.
Social protest is defined as a strong reaction to another human’s actions. In the novel, The Grapes of Wrath, there are many instances of social protest that are shown in many different ways, whether they be blatantly obvious or extremely subtle, and John Steinbeck introduces many different characters to spark these reactions from the lower class through unfair practices. In particular, Steinbeck displays the differences in social classes to point out that institutions are responsible for the suffering that the Okies, the lower class, must go through.
A family consists of a group of interacting individuals related by blood, marriage, cohabitation, or adoption who interdependently perform relevant functions by fulfilling expected roles. (Edelman, Kudzma, & Mandle, 2014, p. 150)
Throughout the book, The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck, the physical transition of the Joad family from a small close-knit group of people living a quiet life on a farm in Oklahoma, corresponds with the internal transition of the concept of family. As the Joads leave their farm and journey westward, they no longer live just within their own isolated unit. Becoming involved with other families as they migrate, changes their focus and by the end of the book, the family members each reach out in their own way to embrace all of mankind as a family.
Additionally, the family of choice consists of people one feels as obligated to as if one was of blood relation. These self-constructed families are no less real or less meaningful than conventional families. In fact, they are known as one’s fictive kin. The bond of this type of family can be formed through several ways. Natalie writes, “for some people, voluntary kinship filled a void left by death or estrangement from biological family, while for others the relationships were supplemental or temporary.” It can be a friendship that turns into a family or a group that one relates to as a family. Either way, the fictive kin family is a blossoming family type. Increasingly, people refer to this as their second family. Some choose it to be their first family when they feel
A family can be defined in many ways, but the common denominator in all is the love and fulfillment one gets by being surrounded by family members. Families can sometimes be at odds with each other, but the strain of this type of relationship usually creates an upsetting feeling to the people involved. People want others to rely on, talk to, do things with, share, love, embrace, and be part of. No matter what the family dynamic is the qualities the word family has will remain the same, as time goes by, and life evolves once again for every person living their