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East of Eden

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 October 2024

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Steinbeck’s use of Old Testament material in East of Eden (1952) is very different from that in To A God Unknown (1933). As outlined in a previous article, Steinbeck was there qualifying the status of his protagonist, Joseph Wayne, by a number of literary means. But the most powerful qualifier of Joseph Wayne as prophet and saviour of his people is the manner in which Steinbeck contrives to keep the closely parallel story of the Joseph of Genesis ever-present throughout To A God Unknown. In East of Eden Steinbeck again, and indeed more obviously, makes use of Old Testament sources. But the Old Testament Cain and Abel do not loom reproachfully behind mere human characters in the book: when considered at all, they are considered explicitly and rationally in discussion, and in another sense the whole novel is clearly devoted to re-enactments of the episode and discussions of its significance.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1941 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 ‘This Side of Paradise’, New Blackfriars, February 1972.

2 ‘Page numbers incorporated in the text are from the following editions: Journal of a Novel, Heinemann, London, 1970; East of Eden, Heinemann, London, 1965.