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Examples Of Archetypes In Of Mice And Men

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Of Mice and Men Archetypes Archetypes are in literature all around the world. All literature has archetype characters and settings. Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, has many archetypes. Two main archetypes are the innocent and the temptress. The author uses the archetypes such as the innocent, portrayed by Lennie, and the embodiment of evil, portrayed by Curley, to support the idea that a person obtains what they give. The first of these archetypes, the innocent, or Lennie, attains what he gives. George’s travel buddy, Lennie, proves that he has a history of killing animals when George says “First chance I get I’ll get you a pup. Maybe you wouldn’t kill it” (Steinbeck 13). He has a background of killing mice and needs something that can take a harder petting because he kills the mice by petting them too hard. Lennie is killing the mice that he finds and George does not really like that. So, Lennie receives what he gives in the end when “George raised the gun and steadied it...pulled the trigger” (Steinbeck 106). Innocent Lennie dies after killing many animals and a human. Poor, innocent Lennie dies after giving death to creatures. This proves that the innocent receives what they give. …show more content…

Curley likes to fight and everyone at the ranch knows this, especially when Candy says “He hates big guys. He’s alla time picking scraps with big guys” (Steinbeck 26). He is the embodiment of evil because he is trying to hurt everyone around to prove he is better than them all. This foreshadows that he will try to fight Lennie. Eventually this fight happens and Slim says “Ever’ bone in his han’ is bust” (Steinbeck 64). Lennie broke Curley’s hand after catching his punch. Curley received a broken hand after fighting many people. The embodiment of evil received what he

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