Preview

John Steinbeck And Kay Boyle Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
872 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
John Steinbeck And Kay Boyle Analysis
Recently, I saw a movie about female tennis champion – Billie Jean King, and although I have never been into the feminism (neither can I say that I quite understand it), her character woke up some other kind of sensitivity in me. After this – to me significant change – I could not help myself not to notice different approaches of John Steinbeck and Kay Boyle to the similar thematic. They both deal with marital relationships and it was quite interesting to view lives of ordinary married couples through both "male" and "female eyes". While Steinbeck opens his story describing the Salinas Valley in December metaphorically referring to the Elisa's character, Boyle jumps directly to Mrs. Ames's inner world. Although both writers give us pretty clear …show more content…
Ames as elegant, gentle, and quiet, Steinbeck gives to Elisa more strength. Her face was "lean and strong", and her figure looked "blocked and heavy in her gardening costume". Both women find their own ways to cover lack of happiness in their everyday lives. The astronomer's wife is managing the house finding the silliest things to keep her busy: "…from the removal of the spot left there from dinner on the astronomer's vest to the severe trashing of the mayonnaise for lunch". Elisa spends her days in garden raising chrysanthemums "bigger than anybody around here." The fact that these two women did not have any children can mislead us to the conclusion that they were both trying to satisfy the instincts they were probably having at the age of thirty-five. While this is the case with Elisa, the astronomer's wife had different problem: the lack of communication with her husband and incapability to understand the world he was in. On the other hand, Elisa does communicate with her husband, but the gentle side of this woman is buried in the sand together with her chrysanthemums. What they do have in common is the need for some warmness in their colorless lives. And for both of them colors came suddenly out from strangers who just happened to be

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In many ways the roles of woman were just kept as being housewives or mothers in charge of managing the children while the men tended to the fields or to the factories to provide for their families. And both Hemingway and Steinbeck tend to portray woman similarly, for example it can be seen in “The Chrysanthemums” and “Hills like white Elephant”. In the short story “The Chrysanthemums” the main protagonist Elisa was shown at the beginning of the story tending to her garden as a man in a wagon came upon her farm. At first she was irritated by the man but when he asked about the Chrysanthemums she was…

    • 761 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The author, John Steinbeck, of “The Grapes of Wrath,” wrote this masterpiece of a novel in 1939. Steinbeck who utilized his books to write about the lives of the most downtrodden people of society during those times, used “The Grapes of Wrath,” to depict and fixate on the lives of workers migrating from Oklahoma to California during the early part of the 1930s (Steinbeck-Introduction Section). In Steinbeck’s story “The Grapes of Wrath,” he breaks the chapters down into three parts. Chapters one through eleven describes a terrible drought, called the Dust Bowel, which had ravaged an area of land known as the Southern Great Plains located between the western parts of Oklahoma to the panhandle areas of Texas. The area received its name because…

    • 342 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    "No, Lennie. I ain't mad. I never been mad, an' I ain't now. That's a thing I want ya to know"(Steinbeck 106) -George…

    • 1495 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Over the course of a student’s life under the American education system, they will read at least two books by California writer and possible communist, John Steinbeck. The longer, sadder, and more proletarian book, Grapes of Wrath, tells the tale of the great migration of Midwestern farmers traveling to California during the 1930s. Grapes of Wrath was not Steinbeck’s first venture into the tragedies that faced migrant farmers once they reached California. He had previously composed an article titled Starvation Under the Orange Trees in 1938 which detailed the hardships that migrant farmers faces in California. Steinbeck uses these two works to describe the atrocities that migrants’ faces and place blame on landowners and corporations and declare…

    • 1389 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    the whole story was about these two farmers called Benny and Lenny and these two farmers are always saying that they are lonely and that nobody loves them and they will never find someone who will care about them and they live in a bunker and the bunker is all beat up like the walls are brought down and the floors are unpainted and they talk about a dog that is old and they want to kill him because he is all old and not good to use and so the reason they want to shoot him is because he is all old and h can barley walk and take care of it self and they want kill him but they dont want to because they fell bad for him and had the dog for so long since it was a pup ans it work around the farm and the guy who is goimg to kill him stoped by the…

    • 301 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    So far in East of Eden by John Steinbeck the story has actually resonated with me quite well, Adam and Charles are what I see as a split manifestation of who I feel I am right now. Adam is the helpless but passionate and vulnerable side of me, a loose cannon of emotion who tries to hand off the fuse to anyone willing to take it, but Charles reminds me of the impulsive and seemingly fragile side of me which actually becomes my strongest trait during times of anger or fear. I think they see it in each other too, that they have the power to destroy one another but they recognize for their sick mother they must stay civil. Given that I’ve said that Adam and Charles are a split of one personality who is to say that we don’t all have the power within…

    • 255 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dear Mr. Steinbeck, I think the ending to the book Of Mice and Men was depressing yet somehow inevitable. Personally I think that it was predicable, and helped me understand the actions of George at the end due to three rhetorical strategies, Characterization, foreshadowing, and symbols.…

    • 380 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    John Steinbeck's short story "The Chrysanthemums" is centered on the protagonist named Elisa Allen. The vivid portrayal of her character in different parts of the story makes the reader wonder who she really is. Steinbeck started by portraying her as a strong and knowledgeable gardener, with a sense of masculinity, following which she is portrayed as someone who yearns for sexual attention in her sensual encounter with the tinker, and concluded with her being described as a beautiful, feminine lady, and then back to her masculine self all within a span of a few hours. The evolution in the expressions, emotions, and the portrayal of Elisa Allen is an important element of Steinbeck’s “The Chyrsanthemums.”…

    • 1081 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    When reading a novel, there is generally a theme. A theme is the central idea of the novel. Normally, the author of the novel is trying to teach readers a life lesson. In Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck uses multiple themes throughout his novel. Steinbeck uses his theme of hopes and dreams to show motivation, unlikeliness, and anger.…

    • 657 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    [Candy] said miserably, "You seen what they done to my dog tonight? They says he wasn't no good to himself nor nobody else”(Steinbeck 60). Candy is introduced in the start of chapter two, he is described indirectly by the narrator as a “Stoop shouldered old man”(Steinbeck 18). He is said to have a round stump on his right arm, but no hand. His dog enters later in chapter two, whom is described as a “dragfooted sheepdog, gray of a muzzle, and with pale, old eyes”(Steinbeck 26). Through these characters, Steinbeck helps the reader understand the stereotype of the uselessness of the elderly and disabled. Along with this, Candy and his dog create a parallel with George and Lennie.…

    • 677 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Of Mice and Men Essay

    • 885 Words
    • 4 Pages

    b) how does Steinbeck present attitudes to women in the society in which the novel is set?…

    • 885 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    At the end of “The Pearl” by John Steinbeck, Kino felt guilty and decides to throw the pearl back into the sea. The pearl symbolizes greed and suggests wealth could bring contentment while also teaching a lesson.Kino fantasized all the possibilities for his family when Juan Tomas asked him, “What will you do now that you have become a rich man?” (pg 24) KIno then stated, “We will get married at the church”, “Have new clothes”, “Have a rifle”, and “My son will go to school.” (pg 24-25) When Kino tried to sell the pearl to fulfill his dreams, the dealer stated, “This pearl is like fool’s gold..It is large and clumsy, As a curiosity it has interest; some museum might perhaps take it to place in collection of seashells. I can give you, say, a…

    • 314 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    John Steinbeck Outline

    • 808 Words
    • 3 Pages

    As demonstrated in four of Steinbeck's works, The Pearl, Of Mice and Men, “The Chrysanthemums”, and “The Leader of the People”, his characters' dreams and aspirations fail as forces beyond their control work to constrain them.…

    • 808 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    This week we read Are We There Yet? It was supper fun and she really like it. During the session I asked her to tell me what she sees in the pictures, asked her if she ever was in the same situation, and who she goes to toy store with?…

    • 227 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Of Mice and Men was written by John Steinbeck in the mid 1930’s and published in 1937 when America had started to recover from the Wall Street Crash. The 1920's were a 'boom-time' in America, there was plenty of work and money was easily made but the 1930's brought unemployment and poverty. The attitudes to women in his novel are in the main unflattering. Steinbeck depicts them as unintelligent and most of the women in the novel cause some kind of trouble or discomfort for the main characters George and Lennie.…

    • 1696 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays