The Significance of Sibling Rivalry in Steinbeck's East of Eden

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East of Eden

The struggle of sibling rivalry over ability and temperament has taken East of Eden in a whole new perspective. Steinbeck’s portrait on sibling rivalry shows the good vs. evil of each character in the story. The nature of good vs. evil as natural selection is also seen in siblings, as a compete for something physical, mental, or something emotional. The sibling rivalry from the biblical characters embraced Steinbeck’s characters throughout every concept in the novel, the good vs. evil confines the characters personality in every idea of Steinbeck’s novel. From the biblical story of Cain and Abel to Adam and Charles to Cal and Aaron the story continues through out every generation.

John Steinbeck's novel, East of Eden is the epic story of a California family who struggle to overcome issues of betrayal, infidelity, and the age old battle between good and evil and sibling rivalry. The story centers around two generations of brothers in the Trask family-Adam and Charles, and Adam's sons Aron and Cal. In each generation, one of the Trask brothers is moral and good while the other brother behaves badly and immorally. Because the good Trask brothers are favored, the bad Trask brothers develop envious tendencies and a recurrent theme of sibling rivalry appears throughout the book. Steinbeck's dramatic account of the Trask brothers and their rivalry in East of Eden is an impressive tale, but it is also a familiar one that closely echoes a

story from ancient literature-it is an allusion of the well-known story of Cain and Abel in the Bible.

In the Bible, the brothers Cain and Abel are the sons of Adam and Eve. Cain is "a tiller of the ground" (Genesis 4:2-5) a farmer while Abe...

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...ther understood what sin they have done afterwards and cal felt guilty about it and his father finally gave cal his blessings.

Sibling rivalry is like a natural occurring hate towards siblings like an inheritance passed from parents to child. The only way to overcome such a desire is to and chooses the good and outweighs the evil parents and child should contain a physical and emotional relationship with each other and view each child as equal. By the idea of timshel, which gives parents and children’s a choice to choose the good and end sibling rivalry.

Work cited

Holy Bible: King James Version. Nashville: World Publishing. : published in 1611. (Genesis 4:2-5) http://www.biblestudy.org/question/why-did-god-reject-cain.html

Steinbeck, John. East of Eden. New York: Penguin, 1952.

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