Sunday, March 24, 2019

The Grapes of Wrath - Fear, Hostility, and Exploitation in Chapter 21 E

Fear, Hostility, and Exploitation in Chapter 21 of The Grapes of Wrath   Steinbecks intercalary chapters in The Grapes of Wrath have nothing to do with the Joads or other(a) characters of the novel, but help describe the story in diametrical terms. They argon similar to poems, offering different viewpoints of the migration, and clarifying parts of the story that the lecturer might not understand. An excellent example of this pulmonary tuberculosis can be seen in chapter 21, where an examination of the attitudes of migrant Okies and the residents of California reveals the changing nature of territory ownership among the changing population of California and gives owing(p)er meaning to the crude hostility that the Joads meet in California.   The first section of chapter 21 seeks the rent of the Okies, who are simple people forced to leave their homes when industrial diversify complicates their lives. Steinbeck writes, Their senses were still sharp to the ridiculousne ss of the industrial keep. And then suddenly the machines pushed them discover and they swarmed on the highways. This statement relates the beginning of the novel, with particular emphasis on the remainder of Grampa and Granma. When industrial farming hits the agrarian midwest, the Joads are forced off their shore up and driven to migration, deserting the house in which they have lived for so long. Before long, Grampa dies of stroke. His life is tied to the land and cannot keep up with such rapid change, and when he dies Granma is sure to follow. The paragraph continues   The movement changed them the highways, the camps along the road, the fear of ache and the hunger itself, changed them. The children without dinner changed them, the endless moving changed them. They were mig... ... and banks. The fermenting anger which Steinbeck describes also relates to the novels title, as grapes serve as a symbol of the migrants, and the wrath represents their anguish and hardship. T he thin line among hunger and anger is broken by the changes in land ownership, and avenging of the workers is the inevitable result.   Within four pages, Steinbeck greatly clarifies and expands upon his story by examining the different emotions and reactions of his general character groups. He takes two sides of an argument and applies them to a deuce-ace body rather than pit them against each other. By mastering the use of the intercalary chapter, he is able enrich his story with deeper thought and explore it outside the boundaries of his main characters. In this manner, Steinbeck is able to write a four-page chapter which holds great meaning to a 581-page novel.

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