ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Courses Videos 906 videos

American Literature 3: The Poe Must Go On (Part 1)
631 Views

What do you get when the guy who wrote “The Raven” makes a serious effort to write in verse? Poe-try… Now, when you’ve detached your eyes f...

American Literature: Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
8968 Views

Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, abridged. Ready? Go.

American Literature: Emily Dickinson
4357 Views

Emily Dickinson: Along with Van Gogh, proof that you’re never really famous until you’re dead.

See All

American Literature: Dust Bowl 4856 Views


Share It!


Description:

The Dust Bowl isn't just a thing that happens when you forget to clean the kitchen. It was a period of severe dust storms during the 1930s which damaged ecology and agriculture and led to widespread drought. Yeah, we'd prefer a dusty cereal bowl, too. 

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

Dust bowl XXXIV....

00:30

and action hello there loyal fans I'm legendary documentarian Jen Freeze [Jen talking to camera]

00:36

you've heard of me right right? well you're in for a treat I'm here to

00:41

introduce my latest documentary it's about the Dust Bowl so without further

00:46

ado I'd like to present a world premiere clip for the most groundbreaking [Jen with a bucket of popcorn]

00:51

documentary film of all time Steve I told you to do a drum roll... Jen

00:58

Freezes Dust Bowl Steven you're fired... in the 1930s a natural phenomenon known as

01:05

the Dust Bowl wreaked havoc across the United States essentially the Dust Bowl [Dust Bowl facts appear]

01:10

was a system of intense dust storms that caused major damage and serious droughts

01:14

throughout North America the Great Plains was hit the hardest but the

01:19

storms reached coast to coast quite a whopper huh the Dust Bowl had several

01:24

causes first the weather was bad just awful to make things worse local farming [Weather woman confused]

01:30

practices had wreaked havoc on the local ecosphere the Great Plain is a dry

01:34

region so farmers were supposed to use specialized techniques to preserve the [Farmer driving a tractor]

01:39

soil long term they didn't instead the farmers dug up the land like mad men,

01:44

planting as many crops as possible loosening the top layer of good soil

01:49

which was precariously thin once that happened all it took was a little bit of

01:54

wind to blow away the top layer entirely and then when a big wind came things got [Dust gusting around people]

02:00

crazy apocalyptic even participants in a vastly inferior documentary described

02:06

these storms with vivid language one survivor described the storms as unreal

02:10

and evil another said that it made them feel like the end of the world was

02:14

approaching sounds like being in a horror movie on top of that [People watching Saw 27 at the theater]

02:17

countless farms were destroyed by the storm livelihoods destroyed in a moment

02:22

also there were locust swarms of locusts for real sounds like one of the plagues

02:28

God let loose on the Egyptians huh these factors made the Dust Bowl one of the [Egyptians running away by a pyramid]

02:32

most significant ecological disasters in human history but that's not the only

02:37

thing that was going bad at the same time the dust storms were tearing apart

02:42

the Midwest the Great Depression was tearing holes in

02:45

the rest of the country's pockets beginning in 1929 the Great Depression

02:49

was an international financial meltdown it affected families across America and [People protesting the Great Depression]

02:54

the world destroying their savings and job opportunities in one fell swoop so

02:59

you can probably see the problem while thousands of families were being forced

03:03

out of their homes in Oklahoma a financial crisis was killing their hope

03:07

to make a decent wage elsewhere yeah tough spot despite the obvious

03:12

historical significance of the Dust Bowl many ignored in favor of the flashier

03:16

stuff like the Great Depression and the much more exciting world wars but now [Bombs exploding in cities]

03:22

you are going to see the Dust Bowl like never before

03:25

through the eyes of the Joad family the account of the Joad families escaped

03:29

from the Dust Bowl can be found in The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck

03:32

published in 1939 the Joads are from the small town of Sallisaw Oklahoma right in

03:38

the eye of the storm the novel uses vivid imagery to make us feel what it [Grapes of Wrath book opens]

03:42

was like to experience the Dust Bowl in one bit we watch as the dust lifted up

03:47

out of the fields and drove grey plumes into the air like sluggish smoke we see

03:53

the sun get covered by clouds until all that is left is a dim red circle that

03:58

gave a little light sounds like a vampire's paradise... another haunting

04:03

description is how a walking man lifted a thin layer as high as his waist and a [Passage from book highlighted]

04:08

wagon lifted the dust as high as the fence top and an automobile boiled a

04:12

cloud behind it unlike the early imagery which focused on how frightening it was [Dust pluming through a field]

04:17

to be inside one of these dust storms these images evoke what it must have

04:21

felt like to leave them behind it would have been bittersweet because

04:24

you'd leave your home behind too... All in all this imagery makes the Dust Bowl

04:28

seem like an intense thing to experience we can learn even more about this by

04:33

looking at the particular experiences of the Joad family when we meet him, Tom [Tom Joad appears in jail cell]

04:37

Joad has just been released from prison only to find his family farm abandoned

04:41

like completely abandoned he learned that his family like many others have

04:46

had their crops destroyed by the unrelenting dust storm on top of that

04:50

the family owes money to the bank which they obviously can't pay back [Joad family searching for money in their pockets]

04:54

now because of this the family farm isn't just abandoned it's been

04:58

repossessed by the bank...This happened to many families not only were their crops

05:03

ruined but their finances too so they decide to leave town head west

05:07

in an old jacked-up car obviously they hope to find jobs there which they don't [Joad family in a queue]

05:12

that's because the great depression thing we were talking about of course

05:16

it's influx of migrants from Oklahoma or Okies as they're called only makes it

05:20

harder to find a job Tom eventually finds a good job picking fruit but later [Tom picks fruit from a tree]

05:24

learns that he's only getting paid well because the orchards former workers are

05:28

on strike, bummer.. truthfully the Joads aren't unique in this regard their

05:32

experiences representative of the countless families whose lives who are

05:36

affected by the Dust Bowl there are some really big lessons we can learn from the

05:40

Joads experience in the Dust Bowl first it shows the importance of family the [Joad family come together]

05:44

Joads are absolutely dedicated to one another through thick and thin that's

05:48

the only way you're going to make it out of something as crazy as the Dust Bowl

05:51

think about what the family risks their own safety to feed Tom when he's wanted

05:56

for murder heartwarming see loyalty second the

06:00

novel emphasizes the theme of poverty the Joads were never rich before the [Joad's finances on chart]

06:04

Dust Bowl but now they're basically destitute to make things worse they're

06:08

not just dealing with the Dust Bowl but also the Great Depression in fact they

06:11

encounter as much poverty outside the Dust Bowl than they do within it for

06:16

example most jobs they find don't even pay enough to buy food thankfully [Hand holding pennies]

06:20

there's some good stuff that comes out of all this suffering we see men like

06:23

Jim Casey dedicate themselves to helping out the poor worker just like we see the [Jim Casey and two men on strike]

06:28

Joad family come together during their own struggles with poverty finally we

06:32

learn the value of perseverance this one is kind of tied together with the other

06:36

two the Joad family for example shows immense perseverance time and time again

06:40

and of course the closing scene in which Rose of Sharon feeds a dying man her

06:45

breast milk is an extreme example of this even in the harshest conditions, life

06:51

finds a way... ultimately it's difficult to place ourselves in the shoes of those [Children playing]

06:57

who experienced the Dust Bowl they're terribly dusty after all haha but

07:01

seriously the Dust Bowl is a fascinating phenomenon to study one part

07:06

ecological disaster one part forced migration add one dash

07:10

of financial meltdown give it a whirl and voila you have yourself a Dust Bowl [Blender explodes]

07:16

Bravo, Bravo that might have been the most moving thing I've ever witnessed we

07:22

learned about the unique historical event that is the Dust Bowl one caused

07:27

by both uncontrollable climate change and environmental exploitation boy that

07:32

doesn't sound familiar at all we also investigated the particular case of the

07:36

Joad family from The Grapes of Wrath which is an opportunity to learn about

07:40

the causes and effect of the Dust Bowl and most importantly we must think about [Examples of reasons to care about the Dust Bowl event appear]

07:44

the individuals who experience the Dust Bowl.. not kings and queens and

07:47

presidents and all those bigwigs but people and now I must bid you adieu, I'm

07:52

a busy award-winning filmmaker after all sorry one moment.... [Jen answers call]

08:06

what are you going to do even geniuses have to get paid

Related Videos

Catching Fire (Part 2)
6719 Views

“Happy Hunger Games!” Or not. Katniss’s Hunger Games experiences left a not-so-happy effect on her. This video will prompt you to ponder if...

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
47687 Views

Who's really the crazy one in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest? Shmoop amongst yourselves.

Edgar Allan Poe: The Twilight Connection
3322 Views

Sure, Edgar Allan Poe was dark and moody and filled with teenage angst, but what else does he have in common with the Twilight series?

El Gran Gatsby
866 Views

¿Por que es el 'Gran' Gatsby tan gran? ¿Porque de su nombre peculiar? ¿Porque de el misterio que le rodea? Se ha discutido esta pregunta por muc...

Fahrenheit 451
84301 Views

Would would the world be like without books? Ray Bradbury tackles that question—and many more— in Fahrenheit 451. Go ahead; read it on your Kin...