Essay Questions For The Grapes Of Wrath

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A few nights ago on Jeopardy!, the Final Jeopardy answer was, “In 1940 House Representative from Oklahoma Lyle Boren denounced it as a ‘dirty, lying, filthy manuscript.’” The question: “What is The Grapes of Wrath?” I rarely watch Jeopardy!, and if I had not been at my grandmother’s house for Thanksgiving weekend, I would have missed this particular episode too. My grandmother, a sharp 84 year-old woman, loves to flaunt her wide breadth of knowledge by answering the Jeopardy! questions (or really, providing questions to the Jeopardy! answers) every night, and she revels in her audience’s attention and astonishment. However, all astonished eyes, including my grandmother’s, were on me when I answered the “20th Century Novels” prompt as I quietly uttered “The Grapes of Wrath.” …show more content…

My appreciation for The Grapes of Wrath comes not from its enticing plot, its historically accurate, poignant portrayal of the American farmer’s plight in the 1930s, or its several allegorical interruptions, but rather, my appreciation comes from Steinbeck’s courage and outright audacity in publishing a novel so shamelessly yet vitally challenging. Steinbeck undertook the virtually insurmountable task of convincing a firm-footed, capitalistic American society that it needed to change its cutthroat ways. When I began reading The Grapes of Wrath, my viewpoints coincided with those of the proverbial car salesperson, the capitalist, the social-Darwinist. However, the Joad family’s perilous journey depicted in The Grapes of Wrath provides Steinbeck’s readers, myself included, with an untold perspective that calls American social and economic practices into

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