Grapes...
Monday, April 30, 2007
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This your forum for discussion. Although I will toss in questions, I will expect you to be the main contributors to the blog. You are expected to post and comment at least twice (1x each) every time we are in the lab as a class. Naturally, you are required to keep comments germane to the novel and to treat your classmates' opinions with respect. Have fun.
8 comments:
things he saw...
and things he wanted others to see
and things i saw...
I'm not sure. I'm sure we would know for sure if we googled his name and autobiography tho. I'm betting he just saw what was goin on and that it didn't actually happen to him.
I have a feeling that he saw these things, because he described them to vividly.
I definitely get the feeling that he saw them...and bella, I agree. These are things he definitely wanted to bring to the attention of others. Why else would he write about them? (don't tell me it was for entertainment purposes. I really find nothing 'entertaining' about it, so that point seems rather moot to me.)
During the Great Depression, Steinbeck was a student. He was given a job "counting dogs" to help him make it through school (one of FDR's programs). I think he was able to see a significant amount of devastation, which led him to write this book. I also know he exaggerated a lot, but I still it he saw a lot of bad things.
THink about the turtle chapters, thebroad brushstrokes of humanity--yse, you are right--Steinbeck DID want to show teh devastation--and if teh generalities were not enough to seel his point, then you have areal family with characters with you whom you sympathize--or not--but he gives the suffering names and personalities--and what is the bigger picture he wants us to see? Remember the prompt about the land?
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