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John Steinbeck Life and Works

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Title: John Steinbeck Life and Works


1
John SteinbeckLife and Works
  • February 27, 1902 December 20, 1968

2
John Steinbeck
  • One of the best known and most widely read
    American writers of the 20th century.
  • Steinbeck wrote in the naturalist style,
    portraying people as the center of his stories.

3
John Steinbeck
  • His people and his stories were taken from real
    life struggles in the first half of the 20th
    century.
  • His body of work reflects his wide range of
    interests, including marine biology, jazz,
    politics, philosophy, history, and myth.

4
Born and Raised
  • February 27, 1902 in Salinas, California
  • He used this setting for many of his stories.
  • Son of John Ernst Steinbeck III and Olive
    Steinbeck.
  • One of four children (3 sisters)

5
Education
  • Enrolled at Stanford University in 1919.
  • Attended off and on until 1925.
  • Never received a degree

6
Family
  • Married Carol Henning in 1930
  • Gwyndolyn Conger who gave him 2 children Thomas
    Myles Steinbeck was born in 1944 and his second
    son, John Steinbeck IV was born in 1946.
  • Married Elaine Scott in 1950

7
Early Works
  • Steinbeck's first novel, published in 1929, was
    the unsuccessful mythological work Cup of Gold.
  • Steinbeck achieved his first critical success
    with the novel Tortilla Flat (1935), which won
    the California Commonwealth Club's Gold Medal.

8
California Novels and Dust-Bowl Fiction
  • Set among common people in the Great Depression.
  • Of Mice and Men, his novella about the dreams of
    a pair of migrant laborers working the California
    soil.

9
Writing Style
  • Steinbeck often wrote about the need for humans
    to be in partnership with nature.
  • His characters are the outcasts of society, poor,
    uneducated and often rebellious.
  • Themes economic hardships, dreams and hope
    lost, the dangers of isolation, rootless
    (unwanted) Americans, mans need to belong.

10
The Grapes of Wrath
  • Steinbeck followed this wave of success with The
    Grapes of Wrath (1939), based on newspaper
    articles he had written in San Francisco, and
    considered by many to be his finest work.

11
The Grapes of Wrath
  • The novel won the Pulitzer Prize for the Novel in
    1940.
  • It was made into a famous film version starring
    Henry Fonda and directed by John Ford.

12
Of Mice and Men
  • Setting mid-state California, rural area,
    during the Great Depression
  • Characters Two migrant workers George, a
    smart, small man Lennie, a huge, slow man
  • Title a literary allusion referring to the poem
    To A Mouse by Robert Burns.

13
Film Versions
  • The film versions of The Grapes of Wrath and Of
    Mice and Men (by two different movie studios)
    were in production simultaneously, and Steinbeck
    spent a full day on the set of The Grapes of
    Wrath, then the next day on the set of Of Mice
    and Men.

14
Controversy
  • Steinbeck's liberal political views, portrayal of
    the ugly side of capitalism, and his
    interpretation of the historical events of the
    Dust Bowl migrations led to backlash against the
    author, especially close to home.
  • The Grapes of Wrath was banned from the Salinas
    County public schools and libraries in August
    1939, lasting until January 1941.

15
Other Written Works
  • During the Second World War, Steinbeck served as
    a war correspondent for the New York Herald
    Tribune.
  • Some of his writings from his correspondence days
    were later collected and made into Once There Was
    A War (1958).

16
Steinbecks Contribution to Film
  • He continued to work in film, writing Alfred
    Hitchcock's Lifeboat (1944), and the film A Medal
    for Benny (1945).
  • His novel The Moon is Down (1942) became a film
    immediately.
  • He wrote The Pearl (1947), already knowing it
    would be filmed, and traveled to Mexico for the
    filming

17
East of Eden
  • Steinbeck wrote one of his most popular novels,
    East of Eden in 1952.
  • Collaborated on the theatrical production of East
    of Eden, James Dean's film debut.

18
Awards and Honors
  • Seventeen of his works, went on to become
    Hollywood films.
  • Steinbeck achieved success as a Hollywood writer,
    earning an Academy Award nomination for Best
    Writing for Alfred Hitchcock's Lifeboat, in 1945.

19
Awards and Honors
  • In 1962, Steinbeck won the Nobel Prize for
    Literature for his realistic and imaginative
    writing, combining as it does sympathetic humor
    and keen social perception.
  • Won the Pulitzer Prize in 1940 for The Grapes of
    Wrath.

20
The Legacy of Steinbeck
  • "His place in U.S. literature is secure. And it
    lives on in the works of innumerable writers who
    learned from him how to present the forgotten man
    unforgettably.
  • Steinbeck's works are frequently included on
    required reading lists in American high schools.
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