Book details
The Grapes of Wrath
by John Steinbeck
1939
About the book
In 1930s America, a severe drought and aggressive agricultural mechanization force the Joad family off their Oklahoma farm. Tom Joad, recently paroled from McAlester prison, joins his relatives and an ex-preacher, Jim Casy, on a trek across Route 66 to California. They seek survival in a labor market flooded with displaced migrants. Upon arrival, they find low wages, hostile law enforcement, and makeshift Hoovervilles. The narrative details their struggle against corporate farming interests and the starvation that accompanies the collapse of small-scale land ownership.
This novel serves students of the Great Depression and readers interested in the tension between labor movements and industrial capitalism. It provides a granular look at the logistics of poverty and the endurance of family structures under extreme economic stress. Readers walk away with a specific understanding of how environmental disaster and banking policies uprooted a generation of workers. It documents the transition from individual independence to collective action in the face of systemic resource scarcity.
Details
- Published
- 1939
- Language
- EN