Top Banner
The Pearl: Building a Background
19
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

The Pearl: Building a Background

Page 2: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

John Steinbeck

Page 3: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

Getting to Know: JohnSteinbeck

American NovelistWrote Of Mice and MenBorn in Salinas, California on February 27,

1902Was fascinated with marine life and spent a

great deal of time at Monterey Bay, California

Loved vacationing at the beach in MexicoWrote mostly about common people down

on their luck

Page 4: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

The Baja Peninsula: Key Facts

Located in Northwestern MexicoPeninsula-a piece of land that juts out into the

water and is surrounded by water on three sides

Separates the Pacific Ocean from the Gulf of California (Sea of Cortez)

Climate: The north is tropical and the south is hot and dry

The primary language spoken is SpanishEnglish is commonly spoken as well

Page 5: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.
Page 6: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

Indigenous Culture

“Indigenous” is defined at m-w.com as “produced, growing, living, or occurring naturally in a particular region or environment.

Therefore, to be part of an indigenous culture means to be native to a land or region, especially before intrusion of foreign culture.

Page 7: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

Scorpions

Have eight legsTwo grasping clawsCurved tail w/ venomous stinger at the end Found on every continent but Antarctica

Page 8: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

More Scorpion Facts

Scorpions live mostly in warm habitatsNocturnalPredatory creaturesAmbush prey (insects, spiders, mice, snakes,

etc.) with claws and immobilize them with their poisonous tail if needed

Fast-acting venom used to hunt and defend

Page 9: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

Effects of Scorpion Sting

Swelling and pain at puncture wound

Sweating, Vomiting, Shock, Death

Treatment=antiserum from doctor

Page 10: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

How are Pearls Formed?

A grain of sand slips into the oysterThis foreign object irritates the flesh of the

oysterIn its defense, the oyster releases a cement-

like substance that covers this foreign objectResult? A Pearl

Page 11: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

OYSTER

Page 12: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

Diagram of Oyster

Page 13: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

Oyster with Pearl

Page 14: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

OYSTERs ready to eat

Page 15: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

Pearl Diving in Mexico

Two types of oysters that form pearls are indigenous to Mexico

Mexico was once the leading country in pearl diving

Free-divers dove to depths over 100 feet on a single breath

Pearls were initially found by bringing up tons of oysters in the hopes of finding a handful of pearls

Very dangerous job: drowning and dangerous animals

Page 16: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

Pearl Diver

Page 17: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

Natural Pearls

Pearls formed in the wild are extremely RARE and therefore EXPENSIVE. Many fisherman on the Baja Peninsula made a living fishing and diving for pearls.

Page 18: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

Pre-Revolution Post-RevolutionMexico Mexico

Ancient Mexico=Peace and Harmony

Simple, tranquil way of life

However, the Aztec Indians were treated as inferiors and were poor

Wealth lived in hands of few Spaniards

Despite previous oppression of the indigenous culture, a great civilization has been built and will continue to grow.

Mexican people can fuse these two cultures, Indian and Spanish, together.

Page 19: The Pearl: Building a Background. John Steinbeck.

THE END