Grapes Of Wrath By John Steinbeck

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Grapes Of Wrath By John Steinbeck Essay, Research Paper

It is said that everything is done for a purpose, and if that purpose is not

obvious, it could be evident within oneself. In The Grapes of Wrath, by John

Steinbeck, the story not only entails the tale of the tragically poor, but also

an uplifting sense of discovery. The story tells not only of the physical

journey to California, but of the characters’ spiritual travels as well. By

examining the lives of Jim Casy, Tom Joad, and Ma Joad, one will see the

enlightening changes that mark their lives through the depression. Jim Casy’s

journey is an astounding one. He begins his life as a preacher, yet decides one

day that his work is invalid; sinful, in some way. He says to Tom, "’I used

ta get the people jumpin’ an’ talkin’ in tongues, an’ glory-shoutin’ till they

just fell down an’ passed out. . . An’ then – you know what I’d do? I’d take one

of them girls out in the grass, an’ I’d lay with her. Done it ever’ time. Then

I’d feel bad, an’ I’d pray an’ pray, but it didn’t do no good. Come the nex’

time, them an’ me was full of the sperit, I’d do it again. I figgered there just

wasn’t no hope for me, an’ I was a damned ol’ hypocrite. But I didn’t mean to

be.’" (Page 28) He decides that he is not noble enough to continue his

work, and grows distempered when others ask him to preach the word of God. He

spends his time with the Joad family gratefully, but little else. He does no

real work to help them out; he spends most of his time thinking to himself.

Although Casy repeatedly confesses his guilt for doing nothing for the family,

he makes no real efforts to contribute, and remains on the sidelines. However,

when Tom trips a policeman that was threatening to take everyone to the station,

Casy takes the blame. "Casy turned to Al. ‘Get out,’ he said. ‘Go on, get

out – to the tent. You don’t know nothin’.’ ‘Yeah? How ’bout you?’ Casy grinned

at him. ‘Somebody got to take the blame. I got no kids. They’ll jus’ put me in

jail, an’ I ain’t doin’ nothin’ but set aroun’.’ Al said, ‘Ain’t no reason for

-’ Casy said softly, ‘If you mess in this your whole fambly, all your folks,

gonna get in trouble. I don’ care about you. But your ma and your pa, they’ll

get in trouble. Maybe they’ll send Tom back to McAlester.’" (Page 342) Casy

further strengthens his morals by becoming a rebel against the authorities. He

leads a strike against a pay decrease out of a peach farm, and when men come to

do him in, he doesn’t step away, but simply pleads his case. "’Listen,’ he

said. ‘You fellas don’ know what you’re doin’. You’re helpin’ to starve kids.’

‘Shut up, you red son-of-a-bitch.’ A short heavy man stepped into the light. He

carried a new white pick handle. Casy went on, ‘You don’ know what you’re a-doin’.'"(page

495) Even as he sees the man means to do him harm, he stands his ground. He goes

from a man who felt he had no role to play in life to a martyr for the poor and

hungry. His journey is one of courage and light. Tom is a rough edged man at the

beginning of the novel. He has killed a man, and yet, seems to feel no remorse.

His reasoning behind the slaying is also less than dignified. "’I been in

McAlester them four years.’ ‘Ain’t wanting to talk about it, huh?’ (Casy asked)

‘I won’t ask you no questions, if you done something bad -’ ‘I’d do what I done

- again,’ said Joad. ‘I killed a guy in a fight. We was drunk at a dance. He got

a knife in me, an’ I killed him with a shovel that was layin’ there. Knocked his

head plumb to squash.’ Casy’s eyebrows resumed their normal level. ‘You ain’t

ashamed of nothin’ then?’ ‘No,’ said Joad. ‘I ain’t. I got seven years, account

of he had a knife in me. Hot out in four – parole.’" (Page 33) He seems to

perceive his misconduct as a ritual of life everyone must undergo, and this lack

of conscience shows one with little character or worthiness. However, when he

finds his family at his Uncle John’s place, he dedicates his life to helping out

the family and himself. He works on the car, towards finding work, and to

comfort Ma when she seems to need it. His personality lightens as he becomes a

vital part of the Joad clan. However, when he finds Casy striking out, and

witnesses his death, his natural instincts come out, and he kills Casy’s

assassin, thereby getting himself into even more trouble than he was in before

for breaking his parole. "Tom looked down at the preacher. The light

crossed the heavy man’s legs and the white new pick handle. Tom leaped silently.

He wrenched the club free. The first time he knew he had missed and struck a

shoulder, but the second time his crushing blow found the head, and as the heavy

man sank down, three more blows found his head." (Page 495) The repeated

blows demonstrate a lack of control possessed by Tom, yet, his manner for

killing the man are slightly more justified than the man at the dance. The

differences between the two killings already demonstrate an enlightening of

Tom’s character. When Tom goes to tell his mother that he cannot stay for fear

of the family, his words show his complete metamorphosis. "’Tom,’ Ma

repeated, ‘what you gonna do?’ ‘What Casy done,’ he said. . . Ma said, ‘How’m I

gonna know about you?’ ‘Well, maybe like Casy says, a fella ain’t got a soul of

his own, but on’y a piece of a big one – an’ then -’ ‘Then what, Tom?’ ‘Then it

don’ matter. . . Wherever they’s a fight so hungry people can eat, I’ll be

there. Wherever they’s a cop beatin’ up a guy, I’ll be there. If Casy knowed,

why I’ll be in the way guys yell when they’re mad an’ – I’ll be in the way kids

laugh when they’re hungry an’ they know supper’s ready. An’ when our folks eat

the stuff they raise an’ live in the houses they build – why, I’ll be

there.’" (Page 537) He decides to dedicate his life towards the fight of

the hungry and oppressed and cares little for trivialities any longer. His

journey is a spiritual one that could not have been assessed without Casy’s

help. Ma Joad is a character that can be over looked due to her sex and seeming

minimal interaction in the novel. Can be over looked, but shouldn’t be. Ma

represents the spiritual glue that binds the family through triumph and turmoil.

In the beginning, Ma is seen as the typical housewife; she cooks, cleans and

looks after the children. She is a somewhat docile creature that follows her

husband’s word with little question. Her first stand against the men in the

family is the first real threat of the family splitting apart. When a neighbor’s

car breaks down, Tom offers to fix it and have the family move on. Ma grabs a

jack handle and states she will not go; that she will hit her husband if he

tries to make her. "Pa looked helplessly about the group. ‘She sassy,’ he

said. ‘I never seen her so sassy.’ . . .Tom said, ‘Ma, what’s eatin’ on you?

What ya wanna do this-a-way for? What’s the matter’th you anyways? You gone

johnrabbit on us?’ Ma’s face softened, but her eyes were still fierce. ‘You done

this ‘thout thinkin’ much,’ Ma said. ‘What we got lef’ in the worl’? Nothin’ but

the folks. We come out an’ Grampa, he reached for the shovel-shelf right off.

An’ now, right off, you wanna bust up the folks -’" (page 218) She fights

against the norm in order to preserve her family, who is all she has left. Here

she gains respect. "The eyes of the whole family shifted back to Ma. She

was the power. She had taken control." (Page 218) Her strength throughout

the ordeal is amazing. She hides her pain and anguish from the others and deals

with their problems rather than hers. She even lies with Granma’s corpse in

order to get the family across to California. "’I was afraid we wouldn’ get

acrost,’ she said. ‘I tol’ Granma we couldn’ he’p her. The fambly had to get

acrost. I tol’ her, tol’ her when she was a-dyin’. We couldn’ stop in the

desert. There was the young ones – an’ Rosasharn’s baby. I tol’ her.’ . . . The

family looked at Ma with a little terror at her strength. Tom said, ‘Jesus

Christ! You layin’ there with her all night long!’ ‘The fambly hadda get acrost,’

Ma said miserably." (Page 294) Her dedication to the family is remarkable.

She becomes dedicated to their new lives, and develops a new insight on life.

"’You got to have patience. Why, Tom – us people will go on livin’ when all

them people is gone. Why, Tom, we’re the people that live. They ain’t gonna wipe

us out. Why, we’re the people – we go on.’" (Page 360) Her strength and

power unfold throughout the story and her journey is one of survival. She

evolves to become the strongest pillar in the Joad family. Steinbeck’s The

Grapes of Wrath is a novel that enables one relate to the struggles of

humankind. Yet it is his evolution of the characters that takes on a great

impact as one can witness the transitions in a human’s whole being that occurs

after heartache and misery unfold. Through Casy’s, Tom’s and Ma’s own spiritual

journeys, one can see that there are brighter things that arise from tragedy.

That although situations may be at their bleakest, one adapts, and may even turn

out better than he or she started out. It is a shame that horrid situations are

the ones that urge people to change their lives, but it is at least enlightening

to see that the majority of these changes are for the better.

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