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Grapes Of Wrath Rhetorical Analysis

Decent Essays

Grapes of Wrath: 1:
Man is one with nature. John Steinbeck opens The Grapes of Wrath with a chapter regarding the connection between the people of the land and the land itself. The first chapter sets the tone for the rest of the novel, creating a sense emotional unity and togetherness. The rhetorical devices applied in the opening chapter allow the reader to grasp the mood of rest of The Grapes of Wrath. Through repetition, generalizations, and personification, Steinbeck establishes the connection between the migrant people and the land.
The personification of various elements of nature reveals the personal relationship between the migrant people and the land. Personifying nature creates a connection between nature and people. The elements of the weather and the crops compare to what is happening to the people during the Depression. In chapter one, Steinbeck shows the …show more content…

In the first chapter of the novel, Steinbeck characterizes the rain as joyous and fortunate, as the tenant children would run and shout “after a rain” (Steinbeck 3). In chapter twenty-nine, the migrant people were terrified of the rain, “shivering and hopeless” (Steinbeck 433). Rain for them as farmers meant crops; rain for them as migrants meant no work. Steinbeck repeats “wind” throughout the first chapter to emphasize the dismay it causes, and repeats “rain” in chapter twenty-nine to express the havoc it causes. The way the people deal with distress and obstacles changes over the course of the novel. In chapter one, the men crouch into the dust to determine the solution to their problems. By chapter twenty-nine, the men gather together to figure out a solution. As the personification of natural elements lessens, the people become more reliant on each other than on the land. Yet, the connection between the people and nature in the first chapter carries on to the

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