Caleb Trask Essays

  • Essay on the Character of Caleb Trask in John Steinbeck's East of Eden

    717 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Character of Caleb Trask in East of Eden Cal Trask is one of the most complex characters in John Steinbeck's East of Eden. Through Cal's childhood experiences, his personal motives, and his internal conflict, Steinbeck shows the development of Cal's character. First of all, the most important childhood experience which affects Cal's life is Adam's 12 year abandonment of his sons. Since Cathy ran away, the twins have no mother figure to give them tenderness as they grow up. This absence of open

  • John Steinbeck's East of Eden - Caleb Trask and the Message of Perseverance

    1429 Words  | 3 Pages

    Caleb Trask and the Message of Perseverance in East of Eden Caleb Trask was a man with many faults and shortcomings. Yet, Caleb was also a man who had a deep longing to be perfect and pleasing to his family, a man who craved his father's attention, and a man with a better heart than any other character in the book. In his novel, East of Eden, John Steinbeck uses the character of Caleb Trask to convey the important message of hope and perseverance. When I first read East of Eden, nothing

  • The Holy Bible as a Sustained Allusion

    1495 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Bible as a Sustained Allusion The Bible is a sustained allusion throughout the course of East of Eden, paralleling with the eternal story of Cain and Abel. According to the Bible, Cain is the "tiller of the ground" (Genesis 4:2). Caleb Trask, a farmer at heart, made a vast amount of money by selling beans. Upon presenting Adam with his present of fifteen thousand dollars, Adam not only discarded the gift, but caused Cal pain by comparing him to his godly brother, Aron, who graduated high school

  • Biblical Symbols and Symbolism in John Steinbeck's East of Eden

    692 Words  | 2 Pages

    his brother (Fonterose, Joseph. p.3380).  The story differs also in that it is Abel who leaves his home instead of Cain.  Abel found his Eden, represented by Salinas Valley, but lost it after fathering a second generation very similar to the first, Caleb representing Cain and Aron representing Abel (Fonterose, Joseph. p.3379).  The story is changed by Steinbeck to illustrate the idea that men naturally have both good and evil tendencies within them, and that this mixture compels men to choose between

  • Free Will in East of Eden by John Steinbeck

    1014 Words  | 3 Pages

    significance of timshel through the introduction of free will, the internal conflict of Caleb, and the blessing of Adam. Steinbeck portrays the significance of timshel through the introduction of free will, which plays an important role in the theme of Cain and Abel and provides the interpretation of Steinbeck. Timshel is brought in by Lee who is the servant of the Trask family and discussed by both Samuel Hamilton, and Adam Trask. In chapter 24 Lee discusses the idea of timshel by showing the different interpretations

  • John Steinbeck's East of Eden - The Character of Adam Trask

    1223 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Character of Adam Trask in East of Eden In Webster's Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language, the word love is defined as a profoundly tender, passionate affection for another person. Love can bring two people together but it can also have a person be rejected by another because of love. In the novel East of Eden by John Steinbeck, the main character, Adam Trask, confronts a feeling of love throughout the whole book but he either rejects the love of people who care about

  • East Of Eden Literary Analysis

    839 Words  | 2 Pages

    time of World War I in the Salinas Valley, and the novel is divided into two vital parts. The protagonist family is the Trask family. At the beginning of the first part of the book, the Trask household consists of two brothers, Adam and Charles, and their father, Cyrus. Cyrus Trask inspires the novel by showing more affection for Adam, than for Charles. Once in adulthood, Adam Trask falls in love with a prostitute named Cathy Aims. Cathy is described as the devil itself, and she believes that only evil

  • Relationship Between Good And Evil In East Of Eden

    1855 Words  | 4 Pages

    in white? The choice between consequence and reward is simple, but the battle between good and evil is not so easily ended. In the book, East of Eden, written by John Steinbeck, the common theme of good versus evil occurs within main character Adam Trask. Adam is surrounded by many positive and negative forces that truly shape the development of his character throughout the progression of the novel. Steinbeck uses symbolic characterization of Samuel Hamilton and Aron as

  • John Steinbeck's East of Eden - Biblical Symbols and Symbolism

    1254 Words  | 3 Pages

    representing Cain and Abel.  Both pairs are similar to Cain and Abel in the way they go about winning their fathers’ favors.  All four give gifts to their fathers, and the fathers dismiss the gifts of Charles and Caleb, the Cain representations (Marks, Jay Lester. p.121).  Caleb and Charles Trask are obviously the more malignant brothers.  They are also the more loving towards their father.  Steinbeck’s purpose in this is to illustrate the need of the Cain character in the story.  Abel, Adam and Aron

  • John Steinbeck's East of Eden - A Biblical Allegory

    1277 Words  | 3 Pages

    the expressions of their love. Sometime later Adam becomes deathly ill. While on his death bed Lee pleads with Adam to forgive Caleb and bless him. "'Don't crush him with your rejection. Give him your blessing! ... That's all a man has over the beasts. Free him! Bless him!" (602). Slowly and with much effort Adam raises his right hand, displaying his act of blessing on Caleb. Like all strong allegories, East of Eden draws one into a world of fictious characters that seem to take on a life of familiarity

  • John Steinbeck's East of Eden - A Study in Human Development

    1445 Words  | 3 Pages

    the book, East of Eden, author John Steinbeck explores the development of humans, from childhood, to adulthood, and eventually, to death. East of Eden, by John Steinbeck, is a genealogical novel about the lives of the Trasks, particularly the main character in the book, Adam Trask. Along the way, the Hamiltons, Ames, and many other characters are introduced. Steinbeck makes a point of showing the continually changing nature of some characters, while describing the ceaseless staticness of others.

  • Overview of East of Eden by John Steinbeck

    1680 Words  | 4 Pages

    John Steinbeck used his childhood growing up in the Salinas Valley as the backdrop to his 1952 novel, East of Eden. Similar to the Garden of Eden, the Salinas Valley is lush and fertile in some places like the Trask ranch while other places are dry and barren like the Hamilton’s land. Steinbeck “wrote the story of good and evil, embracing love and hate, demonstrating their inseparability” (Krávlová 51). He creates an allegory for the story of Cain and Abel that follow three generations who, despite

  • Desire In John Steinbeck's East Of Eden

    1271 Words  | 3 Pages

    From a very young age, Caleb knows he’s different from his brother, he’s more malicious, “Out of revenge Cal extracted a fluid power, and out of power, joy” (349). Caleb’s malice, desire for revenge, and lack of control leads him to share the secret about their mother that drives Aron to enlist in a war where he dies. Aron’s death triggers a stroke in Adam, something Caleb blames himself for. Caleb also wants to be loved by his father, the way Aron is. Caleb even admits to Will Hamilton that

  • East of Eden Summary

    1358 Words  | 3 Pages

    barren land, they earn a comforable and respectable life in America. Samuel works as a blacksmith, and his wife eventually gives birth to four boys and five girls. Years after the Hamilton’s arrival Adam Trask also settles on the Salinas Valley. Adam is a wealthy man with a tragic chidhood. Cyrus Trask, Adam’s father, transmitted a disease called syphilis on to Adam’s mother, soon after Adam’s birth. Consequently, Adam’s mother then proceeded to committ suicide after discovering her illness. Cyrus quickly

  • John Steinbeck's East of Eden - Confused Notions of Good and Evil

    1080 Words  | 3 Pages

    Confused Notions of Good and Evil in East of Eden East of Eden is an epic novel about individual ethics - whether men and women have the power to choose between good and evil. East of Eden, to be polite, it is not Steinbeck's best novel. Not by a long shot. Steinbeck had wrestled with a moral question and lost. It was as though he had been thinking about life, but not too deeply. "East of Eden" was a third-rate best seller, the story of two American families over three generations, seven decades

  • East Of Eden Literary Analysis

    1566 Words  | 4 Pages

    Adam and Charles, and Aron and Caleb do not have the opulence of experiencing a strong and affectionate brother relationship; they struggle with extreme sibling rivalry. In fact, the majority of the characters in this novel receive only tragic love, reflected from Steinbeck’s personal

  • Good And Evil In John Steinbeck's East Of Eden

    1673 Words  | 4 Pages

    Throughout history people have struggled with the issue of good versus evil. Many people are classified by others as either completely good or completely evil. The problem about classifying people like that is that no one person is truly completely good or completely evil. Good and evil exist within every person.Steinbeck explores this timeless issue in many of his works but it is most prevalent in his novel East of Eden. The central characters in East of Eden all struggle with the battle of good

  • East of Eden, by John Steinbeck

    1553 Words  | 4 Pages

    Un-naturalistic When discussing John Steinbeck’s “Great American Novel,” East of Eden, many obvious topics come to mind. Steinbeck’s many biblical allegories to Genesis, more specifically “Adam and Eve”, “Cain and Abel”, and even “Pandora’s Box” come to mind. But, if a reader really wants Steinbeck’s story to come alive, it is important to not look past the allegories and Steinbeck’s running themes of good overcoming evil, but to look deeper into how he used them to develop his story in a non conventional

  • Timshel and Three Characters in John Steinbeck's 'East of Eden'

    1599 Words  | 4 Pages

    will judge them, not fate or destiny. Three characters that portray the meaning of timshel are: Adam Trask, Cathy/Kate and Cal Trask. East of Eden supports the meaning for the Hebrew word 'timshel' through the actions of the diverse characters by giving them all the freedom of choice to decide between good and evil. One of the characters in East of Eden who's actions support timshel is Adam Trask. Adam is a representation of good in the novel. He is the Abel of the modern day biblical story of Cain

  • Message of Hope in East of Eden, Cannery Row, and The Grapes of Wrath

    2984 Words  | 6 Pages

    Message of Hope in East of Eden, Cannery Row, and The Grapes of Wrath When I look at Caleb Trask, I see a man from the book East of Eden to admire.  Although he was a man with many faults and shortcomings, and a man with an unnatural sense of cruelty, he was also a man who had a deep longing to be perfect and pleasing to his family, a man who craved his father's attention, and a man with a better heart than any other character in the book.  When I look at Mack I see a man with more soul and