Rhetorical Strategies
John Steinbeck’s novel, The Grapes of Wrath, presents its readers with many rhetorical strategies, such as the following:
- · Personification- “The wind cried and whimpered,” (Steinbeck, 2).
- · Personification- “The truck tires sang on the road,” (Steinbeck, 9).
- · Biblical allusion- “’Preacher an’ his wife stayed at our place one time. Jehovites they was…’” (Steinbeck, 23).
- · Metonymy- “The bank—the monster has to have profits all the time…When the monster stops growing, it dies,” (Steinbeck, 32).
- · Parallelism- “He could not see the land as it was, he could not smell the land as it smelled; his feet did not stamp the clods or feel the warmth and power of the earth…” (Steinbeck, 35).
- · Volta- occurs on page 126 the tone shifts from suspicion to sorrow. Originally, Tom is defensive because a man is questioning who they are and where they come from. However there is a quick shift in tone when they become friendly with each other.
Throughout Steinbeck’s novel he includes many rhetorical strategies to illustrate the conditions of the Great Depression; that was the main goal of the personification and metaphors used by Steinbeck. Steinbeck also utilized metonymies for the purpose of style. Each metonymy he uses is specific and thought through. For example, he uses a monster to represent the bank; this is not the kindest representation but it illustrates for the readers the true animosity of the people during the time. It also adds to his flow to result in some of his writing being poetic.