Dust Bowl Migrants (Dorothea Lange)

Dust Bowl Migrants (Dorothea Lange)

Thursday, February 26, 2026

An Ending, Part 2: Rose of Sharon's Gift

The novel ends with an epic flood, almost Biblical in proportion, that forces Ma and Pa -- with Rose of Sharon, Ruthie and Winfield in tow -- to find higher ground.  In part they are spurred on to aid Rose of Sharon's health as she has just lost her baby and is still feeling unwell, both physically and emotionally.  They seek shelter in a barn, only to encounter a boy and his father, who is dying of hunger and can no longer digest solid food. The novel ends when Rose of Sharon

        loosened one side of the blanket and bared her breast. "You got to," she said.  "there." Her hand                moved behind his head and supported it.  Her fingers moved gently in his hair.  She looked up and            across hte barn, and her lips came together and smiled mysteriously (455).

What is the significance of this gesture and the image this scene is describing?

An Ending, Part 1: Tom's Speech

 Tom Joad, the moral center of the The Grapes of Wrath, abruptly exits the novel in chapter 28.  In order to escape possible arrest and to save his family from the effects of his problems, he decides (with the approval of Ma) to do the unthinkable: leave the family.  In his conversation with Ma he gives his famous speech which can be interpreted as a moment of spiritual insight, a gesture of solidarity or a call to action. He says (in part), "I'll be ever'where-- wherever you look. Wherever they's a fight so hungry people can eat, I'll be there.  Where they's a cop beatin' up a guy, I'll be there"(419).  While not the end of the novel, it is arguably the ending of its most important story arc. 

What is the significance of this gesture and the image this scene is describing?

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Social and Political Institutions Under the Microscope

 

Grapes of Wrath is a litmus test for social and political instutions of Depression Era America.  The novel portrays business owners and workers, police and strikers, govenrment official and ordinary Americans.  What does the novel tell us about various social and political instutions like the government, the police, landowners, unions, religion, and ordinary Americans?

Dreams and Epiphanies

 The Joad family begin an epic journey with dreams and hopes.  Grandpa, for one,  imagines a life of ease picking  grapes and eating all the fruit he wants.  Rose of Sharon and Connie imagine a successful career as a radio operator with a new house for the new baby and ice.  Yet, along the way they learn harsh truths about their new reality from the cost of labor, discrimination, and suffering endemic to the human condition.


What is one dream or illusion that they have that is shattered or that they stubbornly hold despite all evidence to the contrary?  What is one epiphany or enlightenment they learn?  Is there a connection between the two?  

The Violent Bear It Away

Grapes of Wrath begins when Tom Joad, imprisoned for homicide, returns home on parole.  Near the end of the novel, in a shocking scene of violence, Jim Casy, the preacher who no long preaches -- now a union organizer -- is brutally murdered by the police and Tom attacks the police with their own weapon, probably killing one of them.  Yet, despite the fact the film is bracketed with violence, there are other moments of peaceful resistance as when Huston and Tom thwart an attempted riot and do not seek vengeance on the infiltrators. 

Is the novel taking a stand on violence?  Under what conditions does it flourish?  Is it ever justified?  What about things like self-defense, vengeance or political action?  Is violence inevitable -- or is there a better way?

An Ending, Part 2: Rose of Sharon's Gift

The novel ends with an epic flood, almost Biblical in proportion, that forces Ma and Pa -- with Rose of Sharon, Ruthie and Winfield in tow -...