preview

Women In The Grapes Of Wrath

Decent Essays
Open Document

Men do not control everything. (Basic) Men are not the center of the universe. Men are not the only strong leaders. (Parallel) Since the beginning of time, men have been the director of families. They saw women as sexual objects and the mothers of their children. Throughout the ages, women made a larger impact superior to an object owned by men. Some cultures treat their women as cattle, and only in a few have they gained the right for humanistic treatment. During the Great Depression women accepted a role larger than just “housewife”. During the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl, men were the patriarchs of the family, when in reality the women were the reason families did not crumble along with the rest of the country. In John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, his character Ma Joad …show more content…

When the family left Oklahoma, Ma made her family her first priority. Samantha Grill states that it was not only Ma who nurtured her family through tough times, but all women rescued their families. “...women worked to provide and care for their families and retain an optimism that helped them cope with the difficult conditions they constantly faced” (Grill 74). The migrant women constantly worried about feeding their families: while the men’s primary concern was making money for food. Ma always ensured everyone ate, even if it was not a full meal. Even when the family temporarily separated, Ma made sure Al delivered food and water to Tom and Casy. Casy, an adoptive member of the family made the following observation of: “She don’t forget nobody” ( Steinbeck 225). Ma’s maternal instinct and her years of motherly experience created a nurturing and strong woman. She always completed her job as the matriarch of the family. She organised her family as if it was an army, where everyone had their job and duty. She was the commander that over saw everything and never lost sight of her

Get Access