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Love Begins

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if i look back, i am lost
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@jomtoad12
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It ain't that big. The whole United States ain't that big. It ain't that big. It ain't big enough. There ain't room enough for you an' me, for your kind an' my kind, for rich and poor together all in one country, for thieves and honest men. For hunger and fat.
John Steinbeck
California Mood Board Analysis
California is the light in the darkness that the Joads and other Okies are going towards looking for high wages and work, trying to get away from the divots their failing crops had left in their hearts even after they put all their time and effort into them. The California poppies with their vibrant orange next to the dust that would be left on top of everything shows the comparison of how there was hope for work and better lives in California rather than in Oklahoma. The dust residue was the first object to be a layer between the Joads and their belongings before they had to sell it a and leave for California. All the pictures are also in a lighter and more vivid colors to show the hope that the West gave to those affected by the dust bowl and banks. The pictures of plants and fruits are all full of color and depth in order to show how prosperous California was believed to be. The photos of the sky and beach are bright blues in order to invoke that feeling of happiness and brightness.
âBut Iâd like to think how nice itâs gonna be, maybe, in California. Never cold. Anâ fruit everâplace, anâ people just beinâ in the nicest places, little white houses in among the orange trees.â
- Oakies
Okie use' ta mean you was from Oklahoma. Now it means you're a dirty son-of-a-bitch. Okie means you're scum. Don't mean nothing itself, it's the way they say it.
John Steinbeck
Pa Joad Mood Board Analysis
Pa is the man of the family and the one who is looked to to provide for everyone and make all the decisions. The picture of the shotgun is used to show how it is Paâs duty to protect his family and land. Both the pictures of the worn out boots and the hat/coat are used to show how Pa is a farmer and Okie through and through. He works hard and he works on the land. The pictures of the ax, the pitchfork, and the cotton are used to represent how Pa provides for his family through traditional farming. They use the ax on the chickens and pigs that they raise, they grow cotton on their farm to sell, and they continued to use older, more traditional farming tools such as pitchforks throughout the whole thing. The packed up jalopy is significant because it is how the family is going to go from Oklahoma to California in search of a better and more prosperous life. The broken farm house represents what Pa and the Joad family are leaving behind. The picture in the middle shows not only the destruction of the dust bowl, but also how Pa feels after being told to get off of his land and home. Lost, ruined and with nowhere else to go.
âOld Tom Joad stood in the truck bed and he was nailing on the top rails of the truckâs sides. His grizzled, bearded face was low over his work, and a bunch of six-penny nails stuck out of his mouth.â
- Pa Joad
Muscles aching to work, minds aching to create - this is man
John Steinbeck
Ma Joad Mood Board Analysis
Ma is described as the citadel of the family. One of the pictures we chose depicted a womanâs bare feet going up a flight of dirty stairs. We chose this photo because Ma is described as having bare feet multiple times and because the stairs represent moving forward which Ma encourages the family to do. The pictures of a woman kneading bread dough, a woman using a wash board, and a laundry line were used to show how Ma establishes and maintains the home. The woman in a high neck, linen dress was used to depict clothing that is more traditional for the time and also to remind viewers of the femininity of the woman which was prized at the time as well. The pictures of the broken wagon and the fading, decrepit house symbolize the reality of their situation in Oklahoma that causes them to have to leave. Their lives there are fading and breaking which brings them down to the picture of the packed jalopy wagon because they have to move on.
âIt ainât kin we? Itâs will we? As far as âkinâ, we canât do nothing, but as far as âwillâ - why weâll do what we will.â
- Ma Joad
But when theyâre all workinâ together, not one fella for another fella, but one fella kinda harnessed to the whole shebang- thatâs right. Thatâs holy.
John Steinbeck
The Dust Bowl Mood Board Aesthetic
To represent the Dustbowl and life during the Great Depression we chose low saturated photos of farming landscapes and dull photos of people who are seen as the ones affected by the devastation. The landscape photos show dust consuming the horizon and an old dirty barn. The other photos represent the number of people affected by the dustbowl and the Great Depression, and their sadness as the colors are washed out. The skies depicted are grey and colorless as described  in the Grapes of Wrath in the opening chapter.
âIn the morning the dust hung like fog, and the sun was red as ripe new blood. All the day the dust sifted down from the sky, and the next day it sifted down.â
- Dust Bowl
Death was a friend, and sleep was Deathâs brother
John Steinbeck
Granma and Granpa Joad Mood Board Analysis
Granma and Granpa represent the old way of life in Oklahoma. They were the original farmers of the land and the ones who started the family farm, which they still live on. For this reason we chose images of horses harnessed to plows. In addition we picked images of an old farmhouse, a workbench, and a tree to show their connection to the land through the work that they do. Granpa is first described as being a feisty, angry old man that drinks too much when we can get it and for this reason we included an image of old bottles of alcohol. Grandma is said to be very religious, and once shot off her husbands buttcheeks after a sermon with a shotgun, as she was so fired up. The image of the Bible and gun barrel is representative of this part of her personality. The images of the old farmer man and women in the house is how we picture them in the Joad household and the roles that they once played in the farm.
âGranma and Grampa raced each other to get across the broad yard. They fought over everything, and loved and needed the fighting.â
- Granma and Grampa Joad
They breathe profits; they eat the interest on money. If they don't get it, they die the way you die without air, without side-meat.
John Steinbeck