Migrant workers during the Great Depression shared similar experiences of economic hardship and instability as depicted in the novel "Of Mice and Men." Both faced challenges finding work, securing basic needs, and forming stable relationships. The characters in the novel reflect the struggles and dreams of migrant workers during that time.
All the characters in the story (well, most of them) are American migrant workers in the 30s in the agricultural Salinas valley. they are also known as itinerant workers. they travel around finding poorly-paid jobs on ranches. they have no family. Steinbeck cared about the bad conditions they worked in and that is why he wrote it. the story follows two main characters, young men, called George and Lennie. the story is about their hardship and life on the ranch they are at.
I believe it does have some understanding in regards to the migration of workers from state to state where the South was hit alot harder than the North. Especially in regards to Stienbecks novel because George and Lenny travel to the states callaboratively known as the 'Dust Bowl' where they witnessed drying of crops and soils until they literally became sand which made agriculture and growing of plants impossible and because the South mostly depend on crops and agriculture for their income, this was serious. I hope this helps but mostly there are other influences but the one stated should be close enough I hope.
He focuses on the hardships that the migrant workers had to live in, which was often barns or bunk rooms.
They are portrayed as bare and minimal. The social aspect of the conditions however are more lively, as there are often many people living together.
John Steinbeck described that How men used to treat women at great depression and some husbands used treat their wives as trophy. The story was set in clearly at California during the great depression when the entire America was undeveloped. as a result men were jobless and had there dreams held high . keepin hope and there families is what kept them going all those years
There are many migrants in Of Mice and Men. The two main characters, George and Lennie Small, are both migrants. Slim, Candy, Crooks, Carlson, Curley, and Willey are also migrant workers.
they all ate a big roast dinner
sad times
silly wotsits
California
Migrant workers suffered quite a bit in the Great Depression. They did not have fixed employment when the Depression began, so they had even less chance of finding a fixed position during the Depression. In addition, people who had been laid off due to the Depression often became migrant workers, meaning there was a problem with homeless men and families moving throughout America looking for jobs. The increase in migrant workers made it even harder for these people to find jobs, since the additional people created more competition and also created new stereotypes of migrant workers that weren't desirable, so it was less likely they would be hired.
migrant workers
migrant workers
becuase the soil in the midwest was dead and dry :0)
I don't know. They were probably paid in dirt.
John Steinbeck was the novelist who portrayed the strength of poor migrant workers during the 1930s in his novel "The Grapes of Wrath." Steinbeck's novel highlighted the struggles and resilience of these workers during the Great Depression.
They were checkpoints created on main highways (during the great depression) that tried to stop migrant workers from moving into their state.
the great depression was due to a stock market crash, which then resulted in thousands of people losing there jobs and becoming unemployed. This is not the only reason why they lossed there jobs though. The migrant workers acted like replacements to the people who lossed there jobs. A migrant worker is a worker who doe's not work from there own country (or something like that).
During the Great Depression, the Dust Bowl states were suffering from dust and debris damage to their crops as well as property. Many people fled to California and other states. These migrant workers were called Okies, since most from Oklahoma.
Migrant workers during the Great Depression found jobs in agricultural regions such as the Central Valley, Salinas Valley, and Imperial Valley in California. These workers sought employment in farms, picking crops like grapes, citrus fruits, and vegetables, often facing difficult working conditions and low wages.