1 / 12

The Pearl

The Pearl. John Steinbeck. Takes Place in La Paz, Mexico. Setting. Climate. Warm Winters Hot Summers Only 6 in. of rain a year. About La Paz.

Download Presentation

The Pearl

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Pearl John Steinbeck

  2. Takes Place in La Paz, Mexico Setting

  3. Climate • Warm Winters • Hot Summers • Only 6 in. of rain a year About La Paz La Paz today currently has 160,000 people and has great shopping, a nice beach-front boulevard, old colonial buildings, and a relaxed atmosphere. Probably the most ‘Mexican’ of the Baja cities, and is a popular vacation and retirement hotspot. • La Paz: • Means “peace” • Is famous for it’s sunsets • Is one of the best places in the world for diving & snorkeling La Paz Sunset La Paz Beach City of La Paz

  4. Indians Lived in Grass Huts Spanish descendants lived in brick houses. The bricks, called adobe, were made of mud, straw, and water La Paz in Story (1930's) The Indians were poor and uneducated, with no knowledge of the outside world. Yet they were an honest and dignified people rich with traditions

  5. A Look at the Town The town of La Paz in the novel is predominantly populated by Spanish -descendant Mexican citizens and rich European settlers. They are much wealthier than the Mexican Indians. Their architecture demonstrates this.

  6. Scorpions • Scorpions are eight legged venomous invertebrates belonging to the class Arachnida • They are related to spiders, mites, and ticks • The tail ends in a bulb-like poison gland or stinger

  7. Scorpions • Sharp pincers for grasping • Use the venom in their tail to poison and paralyze their prey • Usually live in deserts, forests, or caves • Over 15,000 different species of scorpions • Carnivores • 25 species of scorpions are deadly to humans

  8. The pearl in Steinbeck’s story is said to be about the size of a seagulls egg Pearls • Are the oldest gemstones in the world • Prized for thousands of years by ancient China, India, Egypt, Rome, and Native American Tribes

  9. Pearls • Natural pearls are produced by the soft tissue of oysters and clams with no human intervention • Natural pearls are rare and valuable. The price of a pearl is based on size, shape, quality of surface, and luster. • Most pearls today are cultured pearls, meaning that they are man-made

  10. About Steinbeck • Born in Salinas, Cal 1902 • Died 1968, in New York from heart attack • Won Nobel Prize for literature in 1962 which is the highest honor a writer can receive

  11. Steinbeck Facts • Type of author who liked to know his material first hand • Many of his works take place in California where he lived • Much of his writing focuses on people who have been treated unfairly and unjustly • The Pearl was based on real people Steinbeck became acquainted with during his travels • In preparation for writing his novels, Steinbeck would often live, work, and be with the people about whom he was to write • In the late 1930’s Steinbeck engaged in a lengthy exploration of marine life along the gulf of the California Baja. There he met Indians who became characters in the Pearl and 1st heard of the story of the ‘Pearl of the World’.

  12. References • www.mexperience.com • www.sandiegohistory.org • www.vacationstogo.com • http://www.nndb.com/people/846/000031753/ • www.desertusa.com • http://insects.tamu.edu

More Related