Friday, July 19, 2019
John Steinbeck was born to middle-lower class family in the farming Ess
John Steinbeck was born to middle-lower class family in the farming   community of Salinas, California. Johnââ¬â¢s    Steinbeck    Imagineâ⬠¦ your town is suddenly stricken with poverty. Your family  business goes under because the economy of your local community can no  longer support it. Herds of your closest friends continually move out  of the town you grew up in due to a severe shortage of work. The  basic necessities of life are so scarce that everyone around you  reverts to their animalistic urges to survive. Those who you have  came to trust, betray you and your family for selfish reasons. This  chaos was typical every day life during the youth of one of Americaââ¬â¢s  greatest writers, John Steinbeck. The environment that engulfed John  Stein beckââ¬â¢s early life shaped his literary style to focus on the  economic hardships of rural labor and manââ¬â¢s every day struggles with  natural urges.     John Steinbeck was born to middle-lower class family in the farming  community of Salinas, California. Johnââ¬â¢s father, who was a  businessman and politician, experienced great difficulty maintaining a  successful business in their small town. John watched his father fail  at many endeavors including managing a flour plant and opening a feed  and grain store as well as the political corruption his father faced  as County Treasurer (Shillinglaw). No matter how much financial  adversity Johnââ¬â¢s family faced, his father always kept a sunny  disposition and took the family on frequent trips across California.   These small towns and cities John and his family would visit, later  served to be the local of his future novels such as: East of Eden and  The Red Pony(Fontenrose, 2). John even used his home town of Salinas  to serve as the setting for the shor...              ...mericans as he did in previous works. In  1960, John published The Winter of Discontent which attacked  contemporary American ideals an longed for conservative ideals. This  piece, which did not achieve the notoriety that Steinbeck hoped for,  would be his last novel before his death in 1968(Shillinglaw).    Steinbeck witnessed his home town crumble due to financial strain as a  child. He felt the effects of the poor economy as his father bounced  from job to job trying to make ends meet. In Steinbeckââ¬â¢s early  adulthood he worked odd jobs with the poorest of the poor, staying in  touch with the injustices these people faced everyday and witnessing  how humans react in times of need. The environment that engulfed John  Stein beckââ¬â¢s early life shaped his literary style to focus on the  economic hardships of rural labor and manââ¬â¢s every day struggles with  natural urges.                       
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