deserts
To look at the novel as a whole, it is a very well-written piece, which draws out the theme quite simply to the reader. The theme being the shift from individual thinking to wide-spread thinking. This shift is most directly seen in the actions of Tom Joad. In the opening of the novel, he is mainly concerned for his own welfare. He wants to make up for all the things he missed when in prison.
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of Sharon changes into thinking about humanity as a whole rather than herself.
Works Cited
Bloom, Harold, ed. Twentieth-Century American Literature. New York: Chelsea House
Publishers, 1987.
Draper, James P., ed. World Literature Criticism. Detroit: Pope-Stevenson, 1992.
Magill, Frank N., ed. Masterpieces of World Literature. New York: Harper and Row,
1989.
Magill, Frank N., ed. Magill's Survey of American Literature. New York: Marshall
Cavendish, 1991.
Steinbeck, John. The Grapes of Wrath. United States: Viking Penguin Inc., 1939.
A
Psychological Transformation
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