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Historical Context of Of Mice and Men. John Steinbeck, 1937. setting. Time: @1932-1937 Place: Soledad, Salinas Valley, Monterey County Conflict: Great Plains migrants seeking work. Salinas, California. Central California Coast (West of Monterey, East of Fresno, South of San Jose)
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Historical Context of Of Mice and Men John Steinbeck, 1937
setting Time: @1932-1937 Place: Soledad, Salinas Valley, Monterey County Conflict: Great Plains migrants seeking work
Salinas, California • Central California Coast (West of Monterey, East of Fresno, South of San Jose) • Economy: “Salad Bowl of the World”, vineyards, cattle ranches • Within 20 miles of the Pacific
Steinbeck’s Family and Influences • B. 1902 • Parents = educated • Dad moved “West” after civil war & bought land • Mom read to him as child: King Arthur, The Bible, Treasure Island • Loved nature, observed man’s relationship to the land
Steinbeck’s Childhood • Grew up in Salinas • Work on cattle ranches as teen • Worked on farms as a college student • Saw lives of itinerant workers first hand
The Depression • Published his 1st book 2 months before the stock market crash
Time: 1933-1935 The Great Depression begins on October 24, 1929 with the stock market crash
Inquiry Question • What would be an affect of the stock market crash for wealthy people? • For average people?
Inquiry Question: How is this graph related to the previous one of the stock market crash?
Inquiry Question: What does this photo say about the Great Depression? How is it ironic?
The land had been over-farmed for decades, then drought that began in the early 1930s that created even more issues on the Great Plains. Inquiry Question: What is the effect of overworked and moisture poor land?
As a result of drought and over-farming, the soil was dry and unanchored with crops. Great dust storms (literally) erupted several times. One even traveled from the Midwest to Washington D.C.
“Last weekend was the worst dust storm we ever had. Many days this spring the air is just full of dirt coming, literally hundreds of miles. After we wash dishes and put them away, so much dust sifts into the cupboards we must wash them again before the next meal. -Ann Marie Low, from Dust Bowl Diary
After the soil was eroded, rain did as much damage to the land as the wind storms.
In South and Great Plains hundreds of thousands of people were evicted from their homes and farms because of the economy or drought.
Inquiry Question What was the total affect of the “Dust Bowl” on the farmers? What do you think your reaction would have been?
Hoovervilles Many evictees lived in random towns of tents and shacks made of cardboard, tar paper, scrap wood or metal called “Hoovervilles”.
Here were all these people living in old, rusted-out car bodies . . . . There were people living in shacks made of orange crates. One family with a whole lot of kids were living in a piano box. --a visitor to a shantytown outside of Oklahoma City
Migration • Approximately two million men—many who had left families behind—wandered the country, hitching rides on the box cars of railroads (Hobo) and sleeping under bridges. • Soon Families began to leave as well
Great migrations started out of towards the West and Northwest.
Inquiry Question • In what ways did migrating to California give people hope? • In what ways were their hopes crushed?
Itinerant Workers • Salinas Valley used itinerant labor (Hispanic, Japanese, white) before the Depression • Labor market flooded afterward • Steinbeck saw these people working himself on ranches and farms
Inquiry Question • What is the result of a flooded labor market?
Labor Clashes • Wages dropped • Unfair working conditions • Over-abundance of labor • Increased use of technology
Inquiry Question • As a writer, how do you think Steinbeck makes his story so real and authentic?
Steinbeck’s Résumé • Steinbeck watched hundreds of people from the Great Plains and South migrate to CA looking for work. • He wrote articles for newspapers on the itinerant workers while writing Of Mice and Men and The Grapes of Wrath. • He lived in Hoovervilles and traveled across the country with them. • Once in California, he literally lived the life of an itinerant farm laborer.
Why Read the book? • An accurate portrayal of the lives of itinerant workers of the Great Depression • Demonstrates history of labor vs. employer • Shows loss of the small, family owned farms and growth of vast, corporate farms