The Grapes of Wrath “I’m learnin’ one thing good,” she said. “Learnin’ it all a time, ever’ day. If you’re in trouble or hurt or need—go to poor people. They’re the only ones that’ll help—the only ones.”* In John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, the Joads are a desperately poor family of tenant farmers that are driven from their Oklahoma home by drought and economic hardship. They set out to California to hopefully find jobs and a better future. During their journey, the Joads suffer through many difficulties. Through the help of others, however, many of their impediments are eased. Despite their own hardships, the Joads helped those they came into contact with. Throughout the book Steinbeck strongly portrays the idea that the less fortunate are the most generous. One of the greatest ways the poor people exemplified generosity was they gave away the little money that they had. In one of the interchapters, Mae, a somewhat cynical waitress at a roadside restaurant, gives a poor family a 15 cent loaf of bread for 10 cents. She also gives them two pieces of candy for a penny when initially they were a nickel each. Two truck drivers, witnessing this, leave a tip of two half dollars. Another example is while the Joad family is working at a peach farm they go to the store to buy food. The man at the store lends Ma Joad ten cents so she could buy sugar. Tom, a member of the Joad family, is wanted by the police after he kills a policeman. Ma gives Tom all the money the family made picking cotton so that he could at least have a chance of getting away. Even though they barely have any money of their own, the poor people still gave to those who were also in need. Another way generosity was shown through the poor people was their willingness to help. The Joads bring Jim Casy, a disillusioned preacher, along with them to California without asking for anything in return. Although they barely had enough room, the Joads were willing to help Casy because they felt compassion for him and respected his honesty. The Wilsons, a couple the Joads meet on their way to California, let the Joads use their tent when Grampa Joad was dying. The Joads then fix the Wilson’s car and travel with them to California, sharing their food and supplies with each other. When Tom knocks out a Policeman, Casy takes the blame so Tom can stay with his family and not go to jail. Tom had previously been in prison and would have been in more trouble than Casy. The poor people were always willing to help and put other peoples’ problems before
THE GREAT GATSBY.. In the Great Gatsby the story is narrated in the past tense and seen through the eyes of Mr Nick Carraway.He is a young man from Minnestota, who after serving in World War 1, went on to New York to learn the bond business. He moves to the West Egg and soon becomes friends with his neighbour, the mysterious Jay Gatsby. Fitzgerald, the author uses the the settings of the East and West Egg to present the differences in the classes and the demise of the American dream in the…
11 (3) 22 April 2013 Lies and Deceit Frederick Scott Fitzgerald’s Great Gatsby portrays a rich man who obsesses over the love of his past and as a result ends his life. Lies and deceit take a major role during the novel, the biggest lie of them all being Mr. Jay Gatsby himself. All humans are innately dishonest and superficial which reveals the characters true disposition and as a result leads to discontent and in Gatsbys case, death. Frederick uses Symbolism, Characterization, and Diction to…
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald In F. Scott Fitzgerald's 'The Great Gatsby' he proves the American dream to be nothing people pretending to be something they're not in hopes of a better life. So is the American dream still a living dream today? Well you would think it would be because you still hear some people still talk about it here and there, so that's what I hoped to find out. Here are some things I discovered in the process. It seems the American dream is very popular in American…
The Great Gatsby Sandra Barco [School] American Lit 6/15/2013 Mr. Peskin During the roaring twenties social class was an important aspect of society. Scott Fitzgerald writes the Great Gatsby. He symbolizes “The American Dream” by the elaborate life of the rich and famous. He introduces Gatsby the millionaire that was once in love with Daisy who is related to the narrator of the story a second cousin once removed. Gatsby is drafted to the war and loses contact with his first love Daisy…
vs. Gatsby In the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, in chapter two Tom Buchanan throws a Manhattan party that is later juxtaposes the Gatsby party in West Egg. Fitzgerald uses this comparison to depict the 1920’s as a period, after the war, corrupted with social and moral values. Although both parties of Tom and Gatsby’s are filled with booze and drugs, the purpose behind the parties are very diverse. Gatsby has parties simply to attract the attention of Daisy Buchanan. Gatsby himself…
On the surface, The Great Gatsby is a story of the thwarted love between a man and a woman. The main concept behind the novel encompasses a much larger, less romantic scope. Although the actions takes place over a mere few months during the summer of 1922 and is set in a circumscribed geographical area, The Great Gatsby is a highly symbolic meditation on 1920’s America as a whole, in particular, the disintegration of the American dream in an era of unprecedented prosperity and material excess.…
However, by the 1920s, this dream has become into only a desire for wealth, even if the actions necessary are illegal. As a matter of fact, F. Scott Fitzgerald did not us the words “American Dream” throughout his world-acclaimed the novel, The Great Gatsby, but it is apparent that he shows the impossibility of achieving happiness in the American Dream. Through symbols, Fitzgerald proves how the original idea of American Dream is slowly decaying. The novel shows that the American Dream is fading away…
| |Jay Gatsby | His idealistic and unrealistic way in which he saw Daisy. He molded her into a view he | His obsession for her love and wanting her to love him and get married drove | | |liked, a view of perfection. |him to great ends. His sacrifice…
Augustine, Nick Bell AP Literature 12 August 2014 There are the good, the bad, and then, the neutral. Some characters are neither good nor bad, such as Jay Gatsby in the The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. The Great Gatsby is a memoir to Jay, written by his best friend Nick. It focusses on Jays obsession with a Daisy, a girl from his past who he chases after, until he give his life for her. Jay got money illegally to become rich, but what he does for others makes us see him as not…
likely I shall ever find again. No Gatsby turned out all right at the end; it is what preyed on “Gatsby, what foul dust floated in the wake of his dreams that temporarily closed out my interest in the abortive sorrows and shortwinded elations of men.” (6) formal diction and tone use of time: in the end use of imagery (adjectives): foul dust shortwinded elations abortive sorrows use of metaphor: the wake of his dreams The narrator is describing the character Gatsby showing that in the narrator’s…