Out In The 1930s Dustbowl
Night- John Steinbeck’s The Grapes Of
Wrath
Oddly, I first read John
Steinbeck’s classic tale of the 1930’s depression, The Grapes of Wrath, as a result of listening to Woody Guthrie’s
also classic Dustbowl Ballads. In
that album Woody sings/narrates the trials and tribulations of the Joad family
as they get the hell out of drought-stricken Oklahoma and headed for the land
of milk and honey in California. After listening to that rendition I wanted to
get the full story and Steinbeck did not fail me. His tightly-woven story
stands as a very strong exposition of the plight of rural America as they tried
to make sense of a vengeful God, unrelenting Nature and the down-side of the
American dream. For those who have seem Walker Evans’ and other photographers
pictures of the Okies, Arkies, etc. of the period this is the story behind
those forlorn, if stoic, faces.
The story line is actually
very simple. The land in Oklahoma was played out, the banks nevertheless were pressing
for payment or threatening foreclosure and for the Joads, as for others, time
had run out. In classic American tradition they pulled up stakes and headed west
to get a new start. With great hopes and not a few illusions they set out as a
family for the sunny and plentiful California of their dreams. Their struggle
along the way is a modern day version of the struggles of the old Westward
heading wagon trains-including the causalities. But, that is not the least of
it. Apparently they had not read Frederick Jackson Turner’s thesis that the
frontier was gone- the land was taken. The bulk of the story centers of what
happened when they get to the golden land-and it was not pretty. Day labor,
work camps, strike action, murder, and mayhem-you know, California, the real
California of the day. Not the Chamber of Commerce version. In short, as Woody
sang, no hope if you aint got the do re mi.
The Grapes of Wrath was made into a starkly beautiful film starring a young Henry Fonda as
Tom Joad. On a day when you are not depressed it is a film you want to see, if
only for the photography. So here is the list. Listen to Woody sing the tale. Watch
Henry Fonda to act it out. And by all means read Steinbeck. He had an ear for
the 1930’s struggle of the Okies and their ilk as they hit California. What
happened to those people later and their influence of California culture and
those who didn’t make it are chronicled by others like Howard Fast and Nelson
Algren. But for this period your man is Steinbeck.
No comments:
Post a Comment