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The women of the grapes of wra (Click to select text)
In, The Grapes of Wrath, Ma Joad and Rose of Sharon graphically portray Steinbeck's themes of strength and sacrifice. They are universal characters, the people who hold up the fabric of society. Through them we view the need for unity and desperation of all those who went west only to find life as bleak as when they left it. Throughout the story Ma is a model of the strength of the human spirit. For example, Steinbeck says of her, "if she swayed the family shook, and if she ever really deeply wavered or despaired the family would fall, the family will to function would be gone". She is the foundation upon which the rest of the family stands. Just as when a single driblet of dye is dropped into a glass of water and disperses throughout, her strength permeates to the rest of the family, infusing them with her mightiness. Also, when the Wilsons' car breaks down and Pa proposes splitting up just for a short time until the car is repaired she threatens him with a jack handle. She knows that all they have in the world is each other and without that themselves to hold on to the have nothing. There is a saying "one finds comfort in numbers" however in this case it is "comfort" is replaced with survival. In addition, near the end of the book, when the boxcars have flooded and it seems all hope has been lost Ma leads the family to higher ground. Despite the despair she feels she overcomes it to do what must be done to insure that they survive to live another day. Her strength gives her the power rise above adversity and be the leader that she is. Ma's strength is what allows the family to hold up as long as they do. Rose of Sharon on the other hand shows the sacrifice the Joads and the rest of the Okies had to endure. For example, while they are driving to California she tells Ma of her and Connie's desire to live in a house with a white fence and have an icebox and go to the movies every day. While Rose of Sharon's dream is ended by Connie's desertion what she describes is also the shattered dream of every other Okie family who came west in search of a better life. Her loss is not personal, but universal. Also, she works in the field with the rest of the family picking peaches and cotton while pregnant. She is voluntarily risking the health and well being of her unborn child to help the health and well being of her family. She is risking her greatest treasure, her baby, to try to ensure that her family will endure. In addition, she offers her breast to a dying man to save his life. This is the ultimate gift, offering one's body to another, giving the milk intended for her dead child to another. With this sacrifice she finally understands her mother and her role as a woman. With her sacrifices Rose of Sharon depicts the ruined aspirations of the Okies and truly becomes a woman. Steinbeck uses his characters to convey many of his themes. With Ma's strength and Rose of Sharon's sacrifices he shows that the most common people are the most important. Those who run the great corporate machine and make themselves rich by standing on the backs of others are nothing without those they exploit and are in fact less than those they consider subordinate.
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