Monday, January 20, 2020
Ma Joad as Leader in The Grapes of Wrath :: Grapes Wrath essays
In a crisis, a person's true colors emerge.  The weak are separated  from the strong and the leaders are separated from the followers.  In John  Steinbeck's novel The Grapes of Wrath, the Joad family, forced from their  home in Oklahoma, head to California in search of work and prosperity only  to find poverty and despair.  As a result of a crisis, Ma Joad emerges as a  controlled, forceful, and selfless authority figure for the family.             Ma Joad exhibits exelent self-control during the sufferings and  frustrations of the Joad's journey.  Ma knows that she is the backbone of  the family, and that they will survive only if she remains calm.  Ma keeps  her self-control when Ruthie tells some children about Tom's secret.  The  family becomes nervous and enraged over the situation, but Ma restores  order by handling the situation in a calm and collected manner.  If Ma were  to ever show fear, the family would most likely collapse.  For, "Old Tom  and the children could not know hurt or fear unless she acknowledged hurt  or fear."  Thus, if Ma acts as if everything is all right, then the family  will assume everything is all right.  Most members of the family openly  express their doubts or fears.  Ma may be just as frightened as the rest of  the family, but she always maintains a front for the rest of the family.  When Ma had fears, "She had practiced denying them in herself."  This  extraordinary self-control helps to keep the Joad unit together and alive.             Ma, like all leaders, must be forceful for things to work in her  favor.  Numerous situations occur in which Ma must be forceful or  relinquish her role as the head of the family.  Her forceful leadership  occurs once when the family, without Ma's consent, agrees to leave Tom and  Casey behind to fix the Wilson's car.  Ma feels this will break up the  family and uses a jack handle to prove her point. It is at this point Ma  replaces Pa as the official head of the family.  Ma's forceful leadership  also surfaces when she threatens a police officer with a frying pan and  when she decides for the family to leave the government camp.  In both  situations Ma must use force to achieve her objectives; in both situations,  she emerges victorious.  Eventually, Pa becomes angered because of his loss  of power to a woman and says in frustration, "Seems like times is changed.  					    
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