Archives for September 2019

Schoolchildren Make Visiting Scholar’s Duty Pure Pleasure

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My most recent trip to the Monterey Peninsula as Visiting Scholar at the National Steinbeck Center was organized to further the Center’s connection to the increasingly diverse community of Monterey County and Salinas, California. Speaking at the Center about John Steinbeck’s career as a war correspondent in the context of the exhibit on Steinbeck at war was a real treat, as were my talks to John Wood’s high school English class in Salinas and the audience—mostly adult—attending a Saturday afternoon session at the Monterey Public Library. As a faculty member and administrator at Oklahoma’s largest public university, I make it a point to meet community groups whenever I can, and the individuals I encountered at each stop on my Monterey Peninsula itinerary came with interesting questions and intelligent insights about the author who helped make the region a literary legend. The library in Monterey is the oldest public library in California, and John Wood’s students are writing research papers on John Steinbeck, who attended high school in Salinas and college at Stanford. But the highlight of the trip was the time I spent with the youngest people on the schedule—fifth and sixth graders from area schools named for Cesar Chavez, John Steinbeck, and Dr. Oscar Loya, former superintendent of the Alisal school district east of Salinas. The kids’ energy was contagious, and their questions kept me on my toes most enjoyably. Their teachers and principals thanked me for coming, but on reflection the greater pleasure was mine. Helping to make John Steinbeck’s life and work relevant in children’s lives today can be a heady experience—one I recommend to those who, like me, research and write about John Steinbeck as faculty members at institutions of higher learning from Oklahoma to California.

Steinbeck at War Brings Wrobel to Salinas, California

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David M. Wrobel—Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Oklahoma University, President-Elect of the Western History Association, and Visiting Scholar at the National Steinbeck Center—recently spent a busy week in Salinas, California speaking to audiences young and not-so-young about John Steinbeck’s war reporting in World War II and, 20 years later, in Vietnam. On September 5 Wrobel explored the question of the century—“Who was John Steinbeck?—with an energetic group of fifth and sixth graders from schools named for famous figures, including John Steinbeck, Cesar Chavez, and Oscar Loya, the former superintendent of schools for the district settled by “Okies” and others, east of Salinas.  On September 6 he met with John Wood’s English class at Everett Alvarez High School, then led discussion of Steinbeck’s controversial career as a war correspondent at the National Steinbeck Center—a presentation which he repeated the following day at the Monterey Public Library. Wrobel holds the Merrick Chair in Western American History at the University of Oklahoma, but he discovered Steinbeck as a British school boy growing up in London council housing. Though an Englishman explaining Steinbeck to Californians might sound a bit like bringing coals to Newcastle, Wrobel’s enthusiasm is infectious, as shown in this photo of his reception by American school children assembled for the purpose in Steinbeck’s home town.