Grapes of Wrath

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The Grapes of Wrath Essay
During the Dustbowl and Great Depression, supplies were scarce and migrants began to work together toward a common goal of attaining a better life. In the 30s, many of the migrants saw Capitalism as corrupt, for they were not given reasons to like Capitalism. When Steinbeck lived in California, he noticed that the migrants were forming groups and camps, correlating with his views on Communism at the time. He saw that the migrants were trying to escape Capitalism. In The Grapes of Wrath, Steinbeck uses the symbol in intercalary chapter seventeen and the Joad chapters to show that the migrants attempt to escape Capitalism through the natural human instinct of Communism.
Using the symbol of the camps, Steinbeck illustrates the illusion of communism. The idea of communism is working together. The migrant camps are described as “a world” (ch.17; 265) and in the mornings are “torn down like a circus” (ch.17; 265). Through the illusion of Communistic ideas in the camp, the migrants are able to escape the realities of Capitalism. The camps are the migrants’ own worlds, created on the idea of a better life in California. Comparing the camps to a circus indicates the camps stand as an illusion, because like a circus, it is an escape from reality. Circus performers create an alternate world in the stunts and acts they perform. The description of the camps shows the reader the migrants’ illusion of Communism against the reality of Capitalism. The description of the Weedpatch camp is another of Steinbeck’s examples of Communism. As the Joads come across the camp, they notice “a high wire fence fac[ing] the road and a wide-gated driveway turn[ing] in” (ch. 22; 389). The fence separates the camp from the real worl...

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...ion and natural human instinct, Communism, with the reality of Capitalism through the symbol of the camps and the events and description in the Joad chapters. While the migrants in the camps are living in the illusion of Communism, working together, they are attempting to escape the harsh reality of Capitalism in the outside world. The camps also act as an escape, while the outside world indicates the realities of Capitalism. Seen through the eyes of the migrants, the outside world is corrupt, leading the migrants to resort to Communism, showing that the natural human instinct is Communism. The Communistic ideals seen in the camp show that the migrants escape Capitalism at all costs. Steinbeck directly compares the ideas of Capitalism with the ideas of Communism. Through the novella, Steinbeck indicates that the natural human instinct through hardship is Communism.

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