THE GRAPES OF WRATH Then & Now

By BARCODE 2x
This book is no longer an old folktale. This book is back in its prime. In The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck chronicled the harrowing journey that many Americans took to the West Coast in search of work during the Depression of the 1930s. But what would the Joad family have encountered if they took the journey now?
If a Southern family was forced off its land by government seizure or foreclosure, they may have fewer options now more than ever. Acquiring a large and more reliable vehicle may be easier now than it was then, though it would take at least two large SUVs to transport them across country now. A family of 12, plus luggage and food, is significant. And the days of laying the elderly members of the family down in the back of a flatbed are over! Ralph Nader was born in 1934, so he had yet to make his stamp on the world of auto safety.
The family would have pulled their caravan up to a gas station and paid roughly $80 to fill each tank every 200-400 miles or so. And in a 3000-mile journey, that can really add up.
The journey would have taken a fraction of the time. A cross-country trip from Oklahoma to California is a matter of days, not weeks or months, as in the case of the Joads. They may not have lost as many members of the family along the way. Both Granma and Grampa, if they had survived, would have been much more difficult to bury along the way. In the 1930s, the barren stretches of road would have been huge and vast, and under cover of darkness, it would have been easier and cleaner to handle the citizen's burial.
The citizens' burial is one of the many laws that the Joads break along the way. And the modern-day Joads would have had to do the same thing, if they did not have the resources to bury their dead lawfully. Bear in mind, the Joads are also transporting a paroled murderer. Tom Joad flees justice to go with his family, breaking parole and crossing state lines. So a registered funeral would draw too much attention to him and coul get him arrested. Other legal infractions, including punching a cop, conspiracy to start a riot, stealing and vagrancy, would still be unavoidable today. Tom Joad's legal wrangles would not be any easier in this century than in the last one. Outlaw justice is a means of survival. In a closed system like a family, it is sometimes agreed upon that certain laws and regulations must be bent to keep everyone together and alive.
Later, when Tom Joad reunites with his friend Jim Casy and joins the struggle to form a worker's union, he may not have had to struggle so hard nowadays. The idea of unions carries more weight now, and a company is less able to suppress their workers through threat of violence. Though nowadays, workers are happy enough to just have the work, and are willing to sacrifice the extra benefits that unions can provide. Unions may be a luxury for today's workforce.
And the work conditions themselves are different now, but in a strained economy, what will the worker do to make a dollar? As we see in The Wrestler, lower-income workers have few options once the economy takes a dive. The Joads pick peaches for a short while, putting the entire family to work (which would never fly nowadays; the young kids would have to go to school). The farms need 9 men to work year-round, and then once a year, they need thousands to harvest.
When the law finally catches up with Tom Joad, he is forced to go underground and live in the woods like an animal. His refugee life and his final end are still unknown. Tom Joad becomes a ghost before his death, a spirit, a watchful eye on the justice of the everyday worker.
The Joads experience something similar to what illegal undocumented workers go through in today's job market. They depend upon the kindness of their communities, and take work from sympathetic friends and sometimes crooked employers. They are often disposable in a tough market, and when their services are no longer needed, they are dropped immediately until the season returns. The face of the workforce is changing. Jobs that may have been outsourced before to foreign hands may now be in demand from U.S. citizens. The migrant worker is left with few or no options.
The Joad family never ceases to help those around them. When Rose of Sharon loses her baby in the end of the story, Ma still encourages her to give all she can. The starving man in the barn at the book's conclusion is in a worse state than the Joads ever were. Through all of the unimaginable hell they experience, there is still someone needier than they. The plight of the homeless today is not unlike this final scenario. Homeless people and families are often left needing to ask for shelter and temporary help from some of the poorest people in this nation. Extended families form out of need, and when resources are scant, the poor are still asked to stretch their rations out to help the destitute.
THE GRAPES OF WRATH is still the novel of our times. History will determine whether or not we have re-entered another Great Depression. History will give a name to our current state. Our elected officials call it a recession, and perhaps they are all just words. The fact remains that there are segments of the population that are being discarded day by day. As the layoffs continue, and the foundations of the economy continue to crumble, what tactics will ordinary Americans have to resort to to survive? What laws will have to be bent or broken to get through to the next paycheck?
THE GRAPES OF WRATH, adapted for the stage by Frank Galati, runs February 6 & 7 at the Blackbird Theatre in Ann Arbor. This fully staged reading begins each night at 8pm. For tickets call 734 332 3848 or go online to www.blackbirdtheatre.org. The Blackbird Theatre is located at 1600 Pauline Blvd, Ann Arbor, MI 48103.




Law-bending in Hard Times and in Good
I agree that the trials of Tom Joad and his family are about the question of what we think we have to do to survive in economically desperate circumstances. And that can include breaking the laws. But what is more eloquent and persuasive to me about the play is its appeal to ethics during hard times. The Joad family may break laws in order to eat, but they remain ethically in tact. Most of the time, these acts are presented in a subtle way; the final action of the play, however, literally involves a spray of "the milk of human kindness," to help a starving man.
And today, the emphasis on law-breaking and law-bending remains in the many media alerts and moral panics I have read about: and that is, the coming rise in crime and increased shoplifting.
These reports signal what many people seem to intuitively assume, that lawlessness will prevail and ethics will falter when we are all forced to live in the woods as survivalists.
This is the wrong focus in my mind. Why not concentrate on the law-bending that occurs in the best of times, when in 2007 many Americans were making a killing on the stock market?
What about the stealing, looting and other property crimes that happen when there is lots of money to be made fast?
Instead of talking about an increase in crime when desperate people are trying to make ends meet, why not talk about the seemingly unnecessary prevalence of crime by undesperate people who think they are above the law and who would laugh and make fun of "the milk of human kindness" as a sentiment only expressed in plays and in, well, places like Oz?
And speaking of Oz, like "The Grapes of Wrath," The "Wizard of Oz" was also written during the Great Depression. While Dorothy was caught up in a tornado-landing in Oz, the Joads, with fugitive killer son Tom, were being foreclosed into dreaming up their own Oz to the California fruit orchards.
Of course, Dorothy became a fugitive killer too. After all, she had bumped off the Wicked Witch of the West. With her farmhouse. And while the 1939 movie ends happily, with Dorothy deciding that "there is no place like home," the next book in the Oz series (all of them written by Michigan man Frank Baum), is not really so happy and homespun. In "Return to Oz," what happens to Uncle Henry and Auntie Em? They confront...yes you guessed it...a foreclosure on their farm.
Seems like a good sequel to me: the Joads meet Dorothy, who has walked to California with her friends, the Scarecrow, the Tin Man and the Lion, to purchase a new farm for her relatives. With no fruit left to pick, they hear about the promise of film careers in Hollywood. Except that when they arrive, the industry has moved to...Michigan, the new film industry Oz for tax breaks.