¶ … Chrysanthemums
John Steinbeck's famed short story, "The Chrysanthemums," was published in Harper's Magazine in 1937. This story is quite vigorously argued to be Steinbeck's best short story, as well as a piece that outshines and does not belong to his remaining body of work. "The Chrysanthemums has been called John Steinbeck's best short fiction, and some rank it with the world's greatest short stories." (Haggstrom, Page 1) He wrote the story just a few years before the United States entered World War II. During this period in America, a great deal of the male population was occupied, mostly abroad, with military activities. Stateside, women picked up a great deal of the industrial and domestic slack while the men fought the second great war. Prior to this period, women lived the traditional experience of confinement, restriction, and social internment.
The Allen ranch in his short story is set Salinas Valley, California, a fictionalized place based on Salinas and the surrounding areas. The season during which the story takes place is winter. When people usually think of California, they do not think of winter. California typically conjures imagery of sunshine, vineyards, mountains, coastlines, beaches, and constant summer time. In fact, the average American is likely unaware of what winters in California are like. Steinbeck's depiction is accurate -- balmy, cool weather, and permeating fog characterize both northern and southern Californian winters. These few details are revealing regarding the narrative and the tone of "The Chrysanthemums."
It is not early on in the story when her husband speaks to the business but when she later sees the discarded chrysanthemums at the side of the road where the tinker threw them that she is catapulted into sadness, which will turn into a quiet vengeance that the reader is to infer occurs after the story is over. In this way, the flowers are symbols for Elisa. It is this inner tension that ever-present for Elisa that Steinbeck illustrates with spatial and metaphorical isolation of Elisa and of the female experience. Fog is often a precursor for a storm. The fog that Elisa lives in is a precursor and even an expression of the storm within her. The end of the story is indefinite and ambiguous. Further action is implied even though the story is over.
Though a masterpiece, this is a sad story. From the very onset of the story, the reader knows this will be a gloomy story: "The high grey-flannel fog of winter closed off the Salinas Valley from the sky and from all the rest of the world. On every side it sat like a lid on the mountains and made of the great valley a closed pot." (Steinbeck, "The Chrysanthemums," Page 1) A deserted ranch in the vivacious state of California, during the winter -- the reader should be alerted that there will be tensions in the story and something is awry, restless, or unbalanced: "…fields seemed to be bathed in pale cold sunshine, but there was no sunshine in the valley now in December…It was a time of quiet and of waiting. The air was cold and tender." (Steinbeck, "The Chrysanthemums," Page 1) The world is unbalanced and Elisa Allen is infinitely restless as well as stuck. The ranch, just like California, and the Allens, should be ebullient, radiant, and pleasant, but they are exactly not. The story is tense, intense, edgy, and uncomfortable. Steinbeck creatively underscores these feelings with the setting and the situation of the story.
The Allen ranch is deserted. Henry and Elisa Allen live and work their ranch alone. Presumably, Henry does most of the labor that generates the family income. He is not a particularly apt businessman, yet is savvy enough to sustain a moderate lifestyle for his wife. He manages to conduct a successful transaction for cattle over the course of the...
Chrysanthemums The society of the United States is, and has always been, one that is highly and heavily patriarchal. Males are the gender that is in charge and women are expected and indeed required to accept this as fact. Their gender necessitates submission and dominion by their male counterparts. Women who strive for power in this society are meant to feel as though they are somehow very wrong because they want
Chrysanthemums and Young Goodman Brown Nathaniel Hawthorne's 1835 short story "Young Goodman Brown" and John Steinbeck's 1938 short story "The Chrysantemums" both deal with female purity and with how it can be easily tainted by temptation. Faith, the protagonist's wife in "Young Goodman Brown" is initially shown advising the main character against performing immoralities. Similarly, Elisa, the central character in "The Chrysantemums," is presented in the first part of the story
As Elisa expresses it, "When the night is dark -- why, the stars are sharp-pointed, and there's quiet. Why, you rise up and up! Every pointed star gets driven into your body. It's like that. Hot and sharp and -- lovely" (par. 73). The open night sky, in contrast to the lid of fog that sits on Elisa now, is felt as a release or a joining of energies,
In effect, he is throwing her away carelessly, just as he threw the flowers away on the side of the road. Therefore, they represent Elisa herself too, and the wants and dreams that have already died in her own life. She is not a happy person, she has many desires and dreams that are unfulfilled, and her husband really does not recognize that. The chrysanthemums are also a symbol
Chrysanthemums by John Steinbeck [...] theme of the story, and how it relates to the story's conflict and outcome. Steinbeck weaves the theme of loneliness and isolation throughout this touching story of a lonely woman and her unfulfilled life. The outcome of the story is as unemotional and removed as Elisa's life is, and so, it is clear her life will go on just as it has, she is
Chrysanthemums" by John Steinbeck, and "Paul's Case" by Willa Cather. Specifically, it will discuss a thematic connection between the two stories. These two short stories highlight the themes of loneliness, unfulfilled desires, and dreams. Both main characters have dreams of something better that are never realized, and they live tragic and unfulfilled lives because of this. These stories might not seem related, but underneath two very different characters lays
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