How Does John Steinbeck Create An Open Culture

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Having personal connections with someone is taking the time to spend quality moments with them. Steinbeck decided to work as a manual laborer and create his own working experiences with the working class. In the article 7 things John Steinbeck taught us about the Great Depression, it states that he visited the migrant camps and saw the terrible conditions in which the migrant workers lived. The fact that he dedicated time into visiting where the workers lived made his literary works more meaningful. Steinbeck was focused and he used the information he collected from his research to develop literary works. “In the articles, Steinbeck even writes that the settlements from afar, looked like ‘a city dump’” (Morfin). When he described the look of …show more content…

Most of them moved to main agricultural areas of the state of California, to where Steinbeck used to live. Moreover, most of the agricultural regions were worsened because of the Depression so it was harder on them. The Great Depression threatened people’s jobs, homes, and caused chaos worldwide. In America there were cultural changes that occurred. The cultural changes that happened could be separated into two types—an open culture that accepted the poverty at the time and found practical ways to stay alive. The other, offered people a way to escape from hunger and the shortage they faced each day. Miranda states that “a good example of the first kind of cultural change is the phenomenon of mass migration that occurred in the 1930’s.” The migrant workers were in search for a job to be able to sustain themselves. They lived in horrid conditions and were the lowest of any worker in the country. The migrant camps were isolated from the neighboring communities so they were seen as outcasts, consequently they were shunned by the local communities. Nevertheless, the workers had been searching for a job long before the Depression, the era simply intensified their tough