Saturday, September 28, 2019
Gow Rhetorical Analysis Essay
Chapter 19 of the book The Grapes of Wrath presents historical background on the development of land ownership in California, and traces the American settlement of the land taken from the Mexicans. Fundamentally, the chapter explores the conflict between farming solely as a means of profit making and farming as a way of life. Throughout this chapter, Steinbeck uses a wide variety of persuasive techniques including parallelism, diction, and metaphors to convey his attitude about the plight of migrants migrating to California. This chapter is filled with parallelism. The Californians wonder ââ¬Å"what if [the okies] wonââ¬â¢t scare,â⬠(236) and ââ¬Å"what if they stand upâ⬠(236) and ââ¬Å"shoot backâ⬠(236). Here, Steinbeck is pointing out the nativesââ¬â¢ fears and hinting about the migrantââ¬â¢s bravery. He also makes a distinct contrast between the recently arrived Okies who believe that they ââ¬Å"ainââ¬â¢t foreignâ⬠(233) and the Californians. Perceiving themselves as coming from a similar background as the rest of the inhabitants of the Golden State, the Okies insist on similar rights; however, the natives believe that although the Okies ââ¬Å"talk the same languageâ⬠(236) they ââ¬Å"ainââ¬â¢t the sameâ⬠(236). This knowledge that they deserve the same decencies as any other American citizens gives strength and credence to their demands. Steinbeck makes the Okies appear more dangerous to the California natives and hints that they have the power and ambition to seize the land if they come together. Steinbeck uses diction to prove that the Okies are great people, and that they might be unstoppable if they come together. Steinbeck talks about a boy who dies from ââ¬Å"black tongueâ⬠(239) as a result of ââ¬Å"not gettinââ¬â¢ good things to eatâ⬠(239). When the Okies learn that the boyââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"folks canââ¬â¢t bury himâ⬠(239) since they have to go to the ââ¬Å"county stone orchardâ⬠(239) to do so, their ââ¬Å"hands [go] intoâ⬠their ââ¬Å"pockets and little coins [come] outâ⬠Although, the Okies have barely got enough food to feed their own families, they will not hesitate to help a person in need. Steinbeck is trying to prove how these ââ¬Å"people are good peopleâ⬠(239) and that they are ââ¬Å"kindâ⬠(239) no matter how poor they are. In the end of this chapter, he talks about how they constantly pray to God that someday ââ¬Å"kind people wonââ¬â¢t all be poorâ⬠(239) and that someday ââ¬Å"a kid can eatâ⬠( 239). Steinbeck points out that ââ¬Å"someday the praying would stopâ⬠and get answered. In addition to parallelism and diction, he also uses metaphors in his writing. In this chapter he tries to show how desperate the Okies really are by comparing them to ââ¬Å"antsâ⬠(233) that are ââ¬Å"scurrying for work, for food,â⬠(233) and most importantly ââ¬Å"for landâ⬠(233). He also mentions why the natives are so terrified of the Okies. The natives are scared for their faith because they picture the Okies as armies. They fear the day that the Okies will march on their land ââ¬Å"as the Lombards did in Italyâ⬠(236) or ââ¬Å"as the Germans did on Gaulâ⬠(236) or as ââ¬Å"Turks did on Byzantineâ⬠(236). By making these comparisons between these armies and the Okies, Steinbeck is trying to convey the migrants as powerful. All in all, Steinbeck uses Parallelism, diction, and metaphors to convey the migrants as powerful, caring, and desperate.
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