Analysis Of John Steinbeck's The Winter Of Our Discontent

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Steinbeck was helped with the script by Wagner , both traveled to Mexico for the filming . On this trip he wrote a film script (Viva Zapata!) , inspired from the story of Emiliano Zapata. In 1947, Steinbeck with the photographer Robert Capa made the first of many trips to the Soviet Union. They visited many parts of the USSR since the communist revolution. Steinbeck's 1948 book, A Russian Journal, it is about their experiences and illustrated with Capa's photos. On November 23 , 1948 “ The American Academy of Arts and Letters had written to inform Steinbeck that he had been duly elected a member” A Life in Letters By John Steinbeck In 1950 , Steinbeck remarried to Elaine Scott, after he had divorced his second wife in …show more content…

However , Steinbeck's fiction becomes less concerned with the behavior of groups - what he called in the 1930s "group man" - and more focused on an individual's moral responsibility to self and community. The Winter of Our Discontent is the only novel Steinbeck wrote in the first person. It examines moral decline in America. The protagonist Ethan grows discontented with his own moral decline and that of those around him. The book is very different in tone from Steinbeck's amoral and ecological stance in earlier works like Tortilla Flat and Cannery Row. It was not a critical success. Many reviewers recognized the importance of the novel but were disappointed that it was not another Grapes of Wrath. In the Nobel Prize presentation speech next year, however, the Swedish Academy cited it most favorably: "Here he attained the same standard which he set in The Grapes of Wrath. Again he holds his position as an independent expounder of the truth with an unbiased instinct for what is genuinely American, be it good or bad." John Steinbeck was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1962 "for his realistic and imaginative writings, combining as they do sympathetic humour and keen social

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