The three hundred and eighty-second åsic- Second Day in an American Teacher’s Hectic World

Everybody likes Pitman, #asaole

A recycled blogpost from my visit in Pitman New Jersey 2014!

At home I don’t teach English, but Swedish as a Second Language. This evening I had the great opportunity to visit an adult learner’s group in Spanish at a College not far from where I am. The students were all taking lessons in Spanish, but volunteered to talk to me about what the conditions are for adult learners at this level in the school system. I found our conversation most interesting and will share their viewpoint with both my students and my teaching friend at basic level of English.

Earlier today I first met with a few children with special needs. I shared with them a few thoughts on what it is like to live in a country where we have monopoly money and a” fairy-tale-like” reality with a king…

I also had a chance to contribute with Swedish words in grade six while they were taking a Spanish lesson about furniture in different rooms of a house. Then I discussed with a group of eightgraders why so many Swedes left Sweden a hundred years ago.

I then had a nice and long chat with one of the teachers who has been a resident of Pitman almost all her life, apart from a short period down south. She told me all there is to know about the little town and I was happy to learn all that first hand, rather than read about it.

On Friday a few of the teachers have planned for a Sweden day, where the students will be getting a whole lot of information about Sweden, but also try some typical Swedish activities. I will contribute with a slideshow about Sweden and explain why the Dala horse is a symbol for  Sweden. The collaboration with an art teacher at this school also led to an idea where we let the kids know a little about how one can paint a typical ”kurbits”.

Tomorrow we’re off to Atlantic City, my teaching friend and I. We will study ESL as the NJ authorities wants it to be. I look forward to that very much. I don’t need anyone to rock my cradle! I am exhausted, but I’m having so much fun! Teaching is my life! ❤

Three Hundred and Eighty-First Asic – Nobel Prize in literature 2016, Part 3

 

Nobelpris_medaljWhen the Secretary of the Swedish Academy announces this year’s winner of the prestigeous Nobel Prize in literature, many of the bookmakers have been biting their nails for a few days. As always we also meet different experts who share their particular viewpoint, such as the literature critics invited to the studio at SVT today:

nobelstudion_2016

Will this year’s winner be one of the favorites or not? I keep hoping for Joyce Carol Oates, year after year. I think the committee has put a spell on her for some reason, since she never seems to be good enough in the competition.

According to Swedish newspapers this year, for instance Dagens Nyheter (DN), names like Ngugi wa Thiong’o (Kenya), Bob Dylan (USA),  Ali Ahmad Said Asbar more known as Adonis (Syria) or Haruki Murakami (Japan) have been mentioned as possible winners.

Nobel Prize in literature 2016 goes to Bob Dylan for having created new poetic expression within the American Song Tradition

Now that we know the winner, I guess the hunt for books starts right away! Everyone likes to read the Nobel Prize winner in order to follow the debate… I would most certainly be one of them who would like to give my opinion for questions such as Is this good literature or not? Did you like this year’s winner? 

Three Hundred and Seventy-Ninth Asic – Nobel Prize in literature 2016, Part 1

What Makes a Good Book Good Enough?

That is one of the things that keeps me busy when I start reading any book whatsoever… Like many other students I was forced to read several books by Nobel Prize winners in school as a teenager, and I guess my teachers picked the novels for different reasons… One of the authors I started to like by reading in school was John Steinbeck. I was thrilled by the way Steinbeck built up his characters in ”Of Mice and Men” and how the story developed.  From a few hints on how George and Lennie had to move on again, after something terrible had happened, I realized I was already thinking; What had happened? As a young reader of a classic novel I was thrilled enough to keep reading until the very last page… I also read ”The Pearl” with great interest and without any effort, but for a novel like ”The Grapes of Wrath” it takes 455 pages before you know the end of the story. As a young reader, I did not meet that challenge, but this summer, during a vaction in California, ”The Grapes of Wrath” was my perfect companion. I drove past the road sign with ”Salinas” and I went to Monterey and the Monterey Bay Aquarium where a section in the Museum describes John Steinbeck’s writing and I was happy to know that in my car, the book was waiting for me to turn the next page and the next…

Nobelpris_medalj

John Steinbeck received the Nobel Prize in 1962,

”for his realistic and imaginative writings, combining as they do sympathetic humour and keen social perception”

To me as a Swedish reader, both when I was young and now, I  must say Steinbeck really made a difference. I can see his deep engagement concerning important issues in society and although ”The Grapes of Wrath” was written in 1938 and first published in 1939, the content is extremely important also in 2016. In Europe where I live, migration is an every day topic, since many thousands of people are on the move between different countries. Some end up in camps or in asylum seeking procedures where bureaucratic systems cannot handle the massive number of applications quickly enough. Migrants today, face the same kind of ignorance and racism as the Okies (people from Oklahoma, moving to California) in Steinbeck’s novel. Migrants both now and then, left for the thought of a better future, filled with hope, but also fear. Their plans may be delayed or sometimes changed, and for a few the plans and hopes may never be fulfilled, due to accidents or other problems along the way.

Describing the process of change in a person’s life, like Steinbeck does in ”The Grapes of Wrath”, is a delicate matter, since it is walking on a thin line between being true or being pathetic. Neither can you exaggerate too much nor be too shallow. When the story begins we meet the American state Oklahoma when the weather conditions have been very poor for a long time. Draught and winds have left the land destroyed and every corn field has a layer of dust that makes the corn worthless. The protagonist Tom Joad, is an ex-convict from Mac Alester, where he sat four years for homicide. Now he is out on parole. Tom Joad comes back home in company with an old friend of the family, Jim Casy. In order to find job and better opportunities the Joads decide to leave Oklahoma for California. During the long trip from Sallisaw, Oklahoma to California both Grandpa and Grandma die. Tom’s brother Noah, and his sister’s boyfriend Connie leave the family for different reasons, but the rest of the family stick together. Ma and Pa, Tom and his brother Al, their sister Rosasharn who is pregnant and the younger children Ruthie and Windfield all come to California after a very tough trip through several states, over mountains and finally through the desert.

The novel very closely describes the extremely poor conditions for migrant workers in California in the thirties. Racism, cruelty and violence together with greed seems to be the rule and being from Oklahoma, means being an Okie, which is a stigmatised group at the time. No matter how hard they work, they seem to face very little understanding and empathy from the Californians. The Joads and the other Okies move from one workplace to the other and get less paid for each time they move, so it seems. For several reasons Tom gets in trouble again.

vindruvor

Throughout the novel, Steinbeck give descriptions of the surrounding landscape and certain topics of interest. One of the chapters is like a dialogue between a car salesman and an Okie buyer and written with humor, although the underlying message is that many poor Okies were fooled by the car dealers, selling off good cattle or mules in trade for a jalopy. Another such chapter is a very nice description of a few instruments, the harmonica, the guitar and the fiddle and how they blend in together for the coming dance evening, when a certain piece of music is played. That is also where ”Swedes up in Dakota” (p 342) are mentioned, which is fun to read for me as Swedish.

But apart from these humorous chapters, there are also some very critical topics, as when Steinbeck describes how land owners had too much fruit and too much potatoes, too many pigs and instead of giving the food to the extremely poor workers, they poisoned the potatoes, drowned the pigs and drenched the fruit in kerosene, only for the pleasure of not giving it to the starving workers. That is when ”The Grapes of Wrath”(p 349) is uttered…

For a period of time, the Joads live in the Weedpatch camp, which is a state camp. For the first time in their lives, Ruthie and Windfield see toilets. The workers are all involved in taking care of the camp together, making sure it is kept clean. Here the Joads meet other people they can trust and make friends with and for a moment the reader is fooled to think this book has a happy ending…

I highly recommend ”The Grapes of Wrath” if you would like to get a glimpse of migrant life from the inside. The novel reveal several complex issues and through the Joads and their discussions throughout the novel, you and I get a chance to consider those issues, too. With the coming election in the USA, the voters can decide whether there will be harder times or not for migrant workers from abroad, picking fruit and cotton in California for the benefit of American producers. Some of the migrants came there just like the Joads, with the hope of a better future. Some of the current Californians are likely to be decendants from Okies who came in the thirties.

Let us read books like ”The Grapes of Wrath” and never forget what made us the ones we are today.

cotton-capsule

Threehundred and seventy-eighth Asic- Trump or not, that’s the question!

The battle between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump has been one of my favorite soap operas this year, but as we are getting closer to Election Day I must admit that I am surprised that Mr Trump is still counted as a possible future President of the United States of America. But having said that, I also know that a number of Americans I talked to this past summer, were not at all as surprised as I am. This was clear to me when my family and I were visiting the USA as tourists in Florida, California and New Jersey. Since I enjoy talking politics I kept asking people I met about their opinion in the coming election. Interestingly they all seemed to enjoy the topic and shared their viewpoint with a stranger like myself.

The first person I talked to was a cab driver in Miami. He was a Haitian and on my question about the potential of the two candidates and their chances to become presidents he said that neither of the two were good enough for this wonderful country, but if he had to pick one, he would vote for Mrs Clinton AND…he said; the Cubans around Miami would most likely vote for Mr Trump, for the reason that they were all still very disappointed with the JFK leadership in the sixties. They would not likely change their opinion no matter what candidate would run for president now… They would all vote Republican, according to the cab driver.

A few days later we met another cab driver in San Fransisco. He was of Swedish origin and had his opinion crystal clear. Mr Trump was his choice… The reason was that Mrs Clinton was not to be trusted and had been involved in too many political decisions that she could be criticized for. I said that from  my point of view, there were plenty of things that one could easily criticize Mr Trump for, too, but the cab driver claimed that the most important issue for the President of USA, would be keeping an economic balance and who would be better at doing that but a billionaire?

A lady whom I talked to for a while when lining up for the ferry to Alcatraz shared the viewpoint that Mr Trump was just playing around. In her opinion Mrs Clinton and Mr Trump were involved in a conspiracy, since they have known each other for many years and may have decided that Mr Trump would be running for President only to make sure Mrs Clinton would easily win…

Last but not least, a member of staff in the National Constitution Center, held the viewpoint that there had to be NEW THINKING and then Mrs Clinton would be disqualified for the reason that she had been a politician for way too long…

Four different opinions from four different Americans, but with one thing in common… They all seemed to be fed up with the SYSTEM and just wanted the Election Day to come, to get it over with. Lately when the tone in TV debates have been worse than ever, I am likely to agree. I want the Election Day to come, so we get the answer to the thrilling question: Who will be the President of the United States?

Three Hundred and Fifty-Ninth Asic- 9/11 in Retrospective

#American flag, #stars and stripes, #asaoleFifteen years ago I was on maternity leave with my youngest daughter. I spent my days breastfeeding… at least so it seems in a retrospective. My daughter was the kind of baby that you cannot really feed enough, so I found myself watching all the available soap operas… There was however one afternoon (But it was MORNING in the USA…) that was not at all like the rest. In Sweden where I live, like in most other countries, we have the tradition of ”breaking news” if something extraordinary happens. I remember the 9th of September 2001 exactly like that. I was actually watching an extra news alert with the footage of the first Tower of WTC burning when there, right then, the second tower was hit. The Swedish News reporter commented this and I remember I felt strangely aware of that particular moment, as a ”NOW” to remember forever… A truly moment of MINDFULNESS.

My first reaction after a short while, was to write to my friend in NJ. At the time he worked as a teacher in a school south of Philly. I wrote ”Are you safe?” and he pretty much replied ”Yes. Why do you ask?” and as I remember it, he and the rest of the staff in that school did NOT know from the start what had happened in NYC, but I did, 8000 km away… That was the start of a surreal experience of watching a part of our history from my livingroom. In fact, it all happened then and there in front of me and it was horrific. I remember thinking of the future then and now I think of all the things that have happened AFTER that date. There are wars and conflicts all over the globe. Terror and meaningless violence has become a part of our time, no matter what we think. It makes me sad that so many people worldwide suffer from conflicts or become the victims of terror acts.  I think the only way to change is within ourselves. Worldwide peace may not come during my lifetime, but I hope for a more generous era soon to come. It is about time we give peace a chance.

#Himmel, #asaole

 

 

Trehundrafemtionde åseriet- Tjugo tusen!

Nu har bloggen haft 20 000 visningar! This blog has now had 20,000 views!

In my blog I share thoughts and experiences from my life and teaching career. Occasionally I also write book reviews or share my experiences from trips. Most of the content is written in Swedish. Some of the posts may be interesting to an English-speaking reader. Please look for ”In English” in the menu to the left. Thanks!

Tack alla ni som läser det jag skriver. I våras publicerade jag en serie inlägg som handlade om musik i SVA-undervisningen. Inläggen hittar du enklast genom att söka här på bloggen med #Musikupplägg att samtala om. Under sommaren har ett antal blogginlägg handlat om upplevelser från en turistresa i USA. För att hitta dem är det enklast att söka här på bloggen med #Turist i USA. Naturupplevelser i Sverige har också fått plats här, till exempel en resa i trakten runt #Högakustenbron och nu senast, ett besök i skogsmiljö vid #Predikstolen. Efter sommaren återgår bloggen till att vara en mix av reflektioner om undervisning, boktips och däremellan en del minnen från lärargärningen och först ut bland dessa inlägg var ett inlägg om svenskan som #Melodins språk. I augusti har jag jobbat med reflektioner om #läsning och #läsundervisning. Dessutom har jag börjat en djupdykning i #Theodor Kallifatides författarskap, där del 1 är ett åseri som heter #trehundrafyrtioåttonde åseriet. Läser du vidare i höst, så hoppas jag dela med mig av fler undervisningstips både här, på #viärlärare, #asaole och på min YouTube-kanal #åseriklipp.

#rönnbär

Three Hundred and Thirty-Fifth Asic: Once Upon a Time…Young Prince Ketchup Married in Sweden…

American flag

Once upon a time a very rich Queen in a big Ketchup Country West of the rest, built a Fortune on tomatoes, sauces and relishes…

The Queen tried very hard to encourage her son to catch up and choose a girl from the Ketchup Country, and her husband set out in the world to meet Kings and Queens, world leaders en masse…but a princess whom his stepson could marry… were nowhere to be found…

The stepson, Prince Ketchup travelled near and far, East and West, North and South…but no princess seemed to be good enough… In a distant vulcanic country with Icelandic horses and hot springs, the Prince at least caught a glimpse of a lovely girl, but just as he offered her some ketchup, she was no longer there! The Ketchup Prince searched both Near and Far. He followed close the Viking trail and asked a speaking killer whale:

Where could she be, my bride to be? Who hid her now? MY enemy?

No, do not worry Ketchup Prince! the whale exclaimed and searched her mail…

I see right here she will be found! But Catch Up now! I hear a sound!

A  King and Queen away from here, invited her, but off now, dear!

In Sweden she is working!  Hear!

The Prince flew off in quite a rush, to gather friends and buy some stuff…

A happy end this story has! The Prince has found a lovely lass!

She is not Swedish, but at least, our country hosts the lovely feast!

AND, I guess they lived happily ever after… 

 

svenska flaggan

Trehundratrettioåttonde åseriet- Nitton tusen!

Nu har bloggen haft 19 000 visningar! This blog has now had 19,000 views!

In my blog I share thoughts and experiences from my life and teaching career. Occasionally I also write book reviews or share my experiences from trips. Most of the content is written in Swedish. Some of the posts may be interesting to an English-speaking reader. Please look for ”In English” in the menu to the left. Thanks!

Tack alla ni som läser det jag skriver. I våras publicerade jag en serie inlägg som handlade om musik i SVA-undervisningen. Inläggen hittar du enklast genom att söka här på bloggen med #Musikupplägg att samtala om. Under sommaren har ett antal blogginlägg handlat om upplevelser från en turistresa i USA. För att hitta dem är det enklast att söka här på bloggen med #Turist i USA. Naturupplevelser i Sverige har också fått plats här, till exempel en resa i trakten runt #Högakustenbron och nu senast, ett besök i skogsmiljö vid #Predikstolen. Efter sommaren återgår bloggen till att vara en mix av reflektioner om undervisning, boktips och däremellan en del minnen från lärargärningen och först ut bland dessa inlägg var ett inlägg om svenskan som Melodins språk. Till hösten hoppas jag även hinna med att göra fler filmer med undervisningstips att lägga upp på min YouTube-kanal #åseriklipp.

Äppelkart

Three Hundred and Thirty-Sixth Asic: Tourist in the USA- Pure luck, God or just a coincidence?

There are moments in life when something wonderful happens to us and we are purely amazed by the fact that we are there, right that very moment. Some of those moments are for me connected to my trips in the USA. One of them, was at the time when George W Bush would soon be elected president for the second time… I was travelling in Pennsylvania in the Lancaster region when me and my friends came to a little village where a growd were lining the road, as if something was about to happen… They had brought their camping chairs, their blankets or just stood upright beside the road… Obviously they were waiting for something to happen…

My friends said that since there was a nice indoor market, we could just as well stop to check why everyone was out this particular day… 🙂 My friend G asked a fellow standing by the road what the commotion was all about and got a surprised look in return: ”You mean you don’t KNOW??? Mr Bush will be here any time!” OK… Let’s say both G and MA were not that thrilled, but politely said ”OH!!!!” with a proper voice, hiding their inner feelings… We decided NOT to check the indoor market, but rather stay outdoor and wait to see what this would be like…

I’m not tall at all, so I decided I would most certainly get a better view from the parking lot, on a higher level from the road… My friend G decided to join me there, but MA stayed by the road. We, me and G, got a nice overview and could easily spot MA from where we stood. After a while a police car drove by and through a loudspeaker someone said: ”Clear the road! Clear the road! The President is on his way!” The road was already quiet and no cars were in sight… but suddenly a car came from a distance, not a nice looking car, but rather a jalopy with open windows… The car was crowded with young men shouting mean comments, and on the side of the car someone had written: ”George Bush SUCKS!” Whatever the young men were yelling through the windows, it did not sound like ”cheering” to me… This happened very quickly and the crowd around us were all appalled, but the two of us, me and G LAUGHED, because honestly, this was quite fun… Where did they come from, first of all? And how did they manage to pass through the police checkpoints with that text written on their cars… Well… Soon enough we understood that all the people around us where not just any kind of audience, but rather fans and supporters of George W Bush, pure Republicans all of them. We found it best to keep quiet from now on, but whispered and giggled quietly that this was really FUN to see…

After a while another police car drove past on the road in front of us. Again someone said through a loudspeaker: ”Clear the road! Clear the road! The President is on his way!” From where G and I stood we could see MA and she turned around sometimes to let us know she was alright. Suddenly we noticed that a couple of black limousines passed and that very moment a lady right beside MA was talking to her and made MA turn from the sight of the road to listen to what the lady was saying… Right then, when the two of them were speaking, a touring coach emerged from the right. The crowd started to yell and wave and G and I could clearly see the President of the United States waiving to his audience…but MA missed this… Afterwards, this was kind of fun, but also sad, since I had been able to spot the President, but to me that was not a big deal… MA however had thought of this moment as a chance to see the President, but because of that ignorant person beside her, she missed her chance… We joke about this nowadays and I am sure there will be new chances for MA if she for instance would want to see Mrs Clinton or Mr Trump in person this year… 🙂

But… was it just pure luck that I had a chance to see the President of the United States during my short stay in the USA? According to both MA and G it is not THAT common that you have a chance to spot a President during your lifetime. A tourist in the USA, such as I , can be lucky to get back home talking about this memory from the USA. I actually spotted George W Bush!!!

svenska flaggan

 

The summer of 2016 I have been travelling on the West Coast of the USA together with my family. Before I went there I thought a lot about our trip and tried to plan for things I wanted us to see. I also thought about what to listen to in the car… Why not make a Spotify-list for our trip? I thought. I added typical ”on the road”-songs that in one way or the other could be connected to America, but in the end, I didn’t really have TIME to check out HOW to connect my ready-made Spotify-list to the radio system in the rental car… So… I guess I had to stick to the rental car RADIO then, huh?

Back home I had a few songs on my list that meant more to me than the others. Years and years ago, I listened a lot to Simon & Garfunkel. I love their LIVE-LP from the Central Park in NYC and I played it over and over when I was in High School. For my trip on Highway 1 I had planned to play a few of those tracks, but like I said, I was more or less left to the producers of several different radio programs that I zapped between, while driving…

Just the very moment when I drove off the Highway into the parking lot for the bay where all the sea lions rest close to Hearst Castle, I suddenly noticed that the radio played American Tune (Simon & Garfunkel). NO other tune had been more perfect at this very spot… But how did it happen???? Luck? God? Random choice of some sort? I don’t know! But it was PERFECT for our experience at the time!

A few hours later when we FINALLY reached the very block where our hotel was situated in Santa Monica, the Radio show played America (Simon & Garfunkel). I cannot see why these two Simon & Garfunkel tunes had to play these particular moments without any reason… Instead I try to think it was meant to be for some reason… Or do they play Simon & Garfunkel day in and day our in California??? 😉

 

A few days later when we were finally leaving MA and G for this time and going back to Sweden… we experienced another extraordinary musical ”coincidence”. I was set for driving off… All our suitcases were put in the boot of the car…the family was buckled up and ready to go… We let our side windows down to be able to shout our last goodbyes through the car windows… Guess what??? From the car stereo a loud scream is heard: ”I’m moving out!” (Billy Joel).

As a matter of fact we WERE ”moving out”! We were now saying goodbye after a week or so in MA’s and G’s home! We were not just leaving TOWN, but rather leaving the USA for Sweden again… MA and I both like Billy Joel. There are SO many different artists and musicians out there that could have been played on the radio that very moment, but after all it was Billy Joel… Why? I cannot find any explanation whatsoever but I am very grateful for all of these moments in my life. They all showed me what pure MINDFULNESS is and I would not want to be without any of these memories. And… Thanks to MA and G, I have lots of fun memories to go back to anytime I like! Thanks! ❤

 

 

 

Three Hundred and Thirty-First Asic – The Grapes of Wrath- A Sort of Book Review

What Makes a Good Book Good Enough?

That is one of the things that keeps me busy when I start reading any book whatsoever… Like many other students I was forced to read ”Of Mice and Men” in school as a teenager, and I guess my teacher picked the novel for a few different reasons, among one was the endurable length… I was however thrilled by the way Steinbeck built up his characters and how the story developed.  From a few hints on how George and Lennie had to move on again, after something terrible had happened, I realized I was already thinking; What had happened? As a young reader of a classic novel I was thrilled enough to keep reading until the very last page… I also read ”The Pearl” with great interest and without any effort, but for a novel like ”The Grapes of Wrath” it takes 455 pages before you know the end of the story. As a young reader, I did not meet that challenge, but this summer, during a vaction in California, ”The Grapes of Wrath” was my perfect companion. I drove past the road sign with ”Salinas” and I went to Monterey and the Monterey Bay Aquarium where a section in the Museum describes John Steinbeck’s writing and I was happy to know that in my car, the book was waiting for me to turn the next page and the next…

Nobelpris_medalj

John Steinbeck received the Nobel Prize in 1962,

”for his realistic and imaginative writings, combining as they do sympathetic humour and keen social perception”

To me as a Swedish reader, both when I was young and now, I  must say Steinbeck really made a difference. I can see his deep engagement concerning important issues in society and although ”The Grapes of Wrath” was written in 1938 and first published in 1939, the content is extremely important also in 2016. In Europe where I live, migration is an every day topic, since many thousands of people are on the move between different countries. Some end up in camps or in asylum seeking procedures where bureaucratic systems cannot handle the massiv number of applications quick enough. Migrants today, face the same kind of ignorance and racism as the Okies (people from Oklahoma, moving to California) in Steinbeck’s novel. Migrants both now and then, left for the thought of a better future, filled with hope, but also fear. Their plans may be delayed or sometimes changed, and for a few the plans and hopes may never be fulfilled, due to accidents or other problems along the way.

Describing the process of change in a person’s life, like Steinbeck does in ”The Grapes of Wrath”, is a delicate matter, since it is walking on a thin line between being true or being pathetic. Neither can you exaggerate too much nor be too shallow. When the story begins we meet the American state Oklahoma when the weather conditions have been very poor for a long time. Draught and winds have left the land destroyed and every corn field has a layer of dust that makes the corn worthless. The protagonist Tom Joad, is an ex-convict from Mac Alester, where he sat four years for homicide. Now he is out on parole. Tom Joad comes back home in company with an old friend of the family, Jim Casy. In order to find job and better opportunities the Joads decide to leave Oklahoma for California. During the long trip from Sallisaw, Oklahoma to California both Grandpa and Grandma die. Tom’s brother Noah, and his sister’s boyfriend Connie leave the family for different reasons, but the rest of the family stick together. Ma and Pa, Tom and his brother Al, their sister Rosasharn who is pregnant and the younger children Ruthie and Windfield all come to California after a very tough trip through several states, over mountains and finally through the desert.

The novel very closely describes the extremely poor conditions for migrant workers in California in the thirties. Racism, cruelty and violence together with greed seems to be the rule and being from Oklahoma, means being an Okie, which is a stigmatised group at the time. No matter how hard they work, they seem to face very little understanding and empathy from the Californians. The Joads and the other Okies move from one workplace to the other and get less paid for each time they move, so it seems. For several reasons Tom gets in trouble again.

vindruvor

Throughout the novel, Steinbeck give descriptions of the surrounding landscape and certain topics of interest. One of the chapters is like a dialogue between a car salesman and an Okie buyer and written with humor, although the underlying message is that many poor Okies were fooled by the car dealers, selling off good cattle or mules in trade for a jalopy. Another such chapter is a very nice description of a few instruments, the harmonica, the guitar and the fiddle and how they blend in together for the coming dance evening, when a certain piece of music is played. That is also where ”Swedes up in Dakota” (p 342) are mentioned, which is fun to read for me as Swedish.

But apart from these humorous chapters, there are also some very critical topics, as when Steinbeck describes how land owners had too much fruit and too much potatoes, too many pigs and instead of giving the food to the extremely poor workers, they poisoned the potatoes, drowned the pigs and drenched the fruit in kerosene, only for the pleasure of not giving it to the starving workers. That is when ”The Grapes of Wrath”(p 349) is uttered…

For a period of time, the Joads live in the Weedpatch camp, which is a state camp. For the first time in their lives, Ruthie and Windfield see toilets. The workers are all involved in taking care of the camp together, making sure it is kept clean. Here the Joads meet other people they can trust and make friends with and for a moment the reader is fooled to think this book has a happy ending…

I highly recommend ”The Grapes of Wrath” if you would like to get a glimpse of migrant life from the inside. The novel reveal several complex issues and through the Joads and their discussions throughout the novel, you and I get a chance to consider those issues, too. With the coming election in the USA, the voters can decide whether there will be harder times or not for migrant workers from abroad, picking fruit and cotton in California for the benefit of American producers. Some of the migrants came there just like the Joads, with the hope of a better future. Some of the current Californians are likely to be decendants from Okies who came in the thirties.

Let us read books like ”The Grapes of Wrath” and never forget what made us the ones we are today.

cotton-capsule