preview

Of Mice And Men Curley's Relationships

Better Essays

Claire Longcore
Pre-IB English P6
Of Mice and Men Final Essay
10/10/17
During the Great Depression, families lost everything as banks crashed and dust swirled over the barren landscape of the Midwest. Parents left their homes and bundled their children and worldly possessions into their cars and headed west to the land of hope in California. In this time, it is difficult to think of groups bonding together, especially as workers compete for limited agricultural jobs on ranches. However, while John Steinbeck’s characters in the novella Of Mice and Men isolate themselves in some ways from the world, they are also interconnected in webs of community throughout their ranch. Curley’s wife, Crooks, George Milton, and Lennie Small are all …show more content…

I don’t care what she says and what she does. I seen ‘em poison before, but I never seen no piece of jail bait worse than her” (pg. 32). Curley’s wife tries to get attention from someone besides Curley by showing herself off, but the men on the ranch realize that if they respond to Curley’s wife, it will elicit a violent response from him and a possibility of getting kicked off the ranch. The result is that Curley’s wife gets a lot of negative attention without any actual friendship. She is also the only woman on the entire ranch from what Steinbeck describes. She cannot talk to the men and there are no women that Curley might allow her to talk to, leaving her without any meaningful relationships. Despite her efforts, she ends up even more separated from the other people on the ranch.
A different form of isolation is evident in being the only person of a certain characteristic, like being the only person of a certain race surrounded by racists. An example of this is Crooks. The men on the ranch refer to him without using his name, calling him a ‘stable buck’ on pages 29 and 30, a derogatory term that refers to an African-American doing dirty work. Steinbeck’s description of Crooks’ living conditions in chapter 4 is direct evidence of his alienation: “For, being alone, Crooks could leave his things about, and being a stable buck and a cripple, he was more permanent than the other men” (pgs. 66-67). He shares very few characteristics with the other men on the ranch,

Get Access