The Promise Land In John Steinbeck's The Grapes Of Wrath

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The Promise Land
Since its first settlement, California grew rapidly, becoming one of America's most desirable places to live. California’s population growth changes every year, but it’s consistently increased over time. It is almost unheard of for California to have a year without growth. The continuous patterns of migration are continuing to change. California has been the destination of dreamers from other states for a long time. It no longer plays that role. In 1848, the California Gold Rush was born when a gold nugget was discovered in a river near what is now Sacramento. The large influx of migrants from other states seeking to get a piece of those sailing riches, commonly known as 49ers, caused California’s small population at the time, …show more content…

Droughts in the 1930s created dust storms carrying and ripping away most of the soil, darkening the sky making an unlivable environment. Realizing the dust storms would not stop, many families sold what they had, and began to travel west towards California in search for jobs on California farms. The Dust Bowl as well as the conditions of the Great Depression, thousands of families set out West, most to California. California took the role of a Promised Land with its warmth and abundance. In John Steinbeck’s “The Grapes of Wrath”, the fictional Joad family is a representation of the many families who left their homes in the mid-west to seek hope and better conditions in California. Tom Joad describes, ''Gonna get me a whole big bunch of grapes off a bush, or whatever, an' I'm gonna squash 'em on my face an' let 'em run offen my chin'' (Steinbeck, 90). This depiction of a dream of a better life leads the Joad family to join other refugees on the journey out west. Race had always floated around the Dust Bowl migration. For instance, Paul Taylor described in his article about drought refugees; the whites could win the sympathy of others that the other farm workers such as Mexicans and Asians could not. In addition, Steinbeck used a paradox, emphasizing numerous times that “most victims of the Dust Bowl were not supposed to experience what the Joads experienced.” As …show more content…

The Silicon Valley, located just south of San Francisco, is the world’s entrepreneurial hotspot. In the beginning, the Silicon Valley was a small place where people knew and worked with each other. Under California law, starting a new company is easy; an innovative culture that constantly produces dividends. Michael S. Malone believes “the Silicon Valley is not easy to replicate . . . the oldest high-tech community on earth . . . largely unpopulated area at the end of WW2 . . . infrastructure.” Following the Second World War, Santa Clara was a small unpopulated county with inexpensive land as well as the large city of San Francisco nearby. The educational aspect of the Silicon Valley offers a wide range of institutions such as small colleges and large universities such as Berkeley and Stanford. The Silicon Valley has a combination of companies, universities, weather, etc., that come to create what the Silicon Valley is

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