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Monday, December 24, 2018

'Marxism in the Grapes of Wrath\r'

'In The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck, Steinbeck uses Marxist ideals to plot the great struggle experienced by the Joad family. The Joads’ experiences examine that the Bourgeoise abuse their power in coiffure to control the Proletariats, alienating and exploiting their class to obstruct revolution by forcing them to work for scantily enough money. Families who had lived and worked on their land their social unit lives became workless as the cashbox repossessed homes to sustain profit. The bank had become a â€Å" junkie” guide by the Bourgeoise to exploit the families for their houses and jobs, leaving them with some nothing.People were often forced to work with this monster in order to feed their confess families, it was known for â€Å"making people do what it wants” (Steinbeck 34), despite who would be hurt in the process. This was a tool used to veto the Proletariats from forming a union, because the â€Å"bank isn’t the like a manâ₠¬Â (Steinbeck 33) and there was no person to punish for doing them wrong. Pushed off of their land, the families move west where they were promised work and an easier life in return for having to give up their homes.The Bourgeoise’s promises fell short as much and more families migrated west, minimizing the number of jobs and money available. Their invent was repeatedly cut, reducing it to too fine to feed their families. Outside of working, the workers were kept from from each one other in order to clog unity, the first step to a disorder. This pick up to control stemmed from the Bourgeoise’s organic greed to keep their power and their money by taking away anybody else’s. A divided nation is easier to control whence one united. To avoid the consequences of unity, the law would â€Å" advert them fear, hate, suspect each other” (Steinbeck 151).This process of alienation among the lower class was the Bourgeoise’s tool of exploitation to avoid rebellion against those of higher social status. The laws in the subject area were bias and only in stern to benefit the Bourgeoise. If such a focalize of social equanimity existed, the local police forces tried to find ways to countermine and abuse the area to break the forming union. eve when migrating from place to place, members of the Proletariat were unable to draw the greedy control of the Bourgeoise. They abused their powers of sempiternal wealth and legal freedom to nurture their high status at the expense of those who occupied the poorer classes.\r\n'

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