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Theme Of Crooks In Of Mice And Men

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John Steinbeck wrote Of Mice and Men during the time of the Great Depression: a time of financial decline in the US. During the Great Depression, 25% of the working population lost their jobs, so lots of people were poor. While white men were suffering from the Great Depression, colored people suffered more. Although the character Crooks is not a central character in the text, his troubles play an important part in the plot. The time of the Great Depression was difficult for many people, especially for the colored for whom laws were in place to segregate them from the mainstream white culture. There are several moments in the text where Crooks is shown powerless: when Candy introduced Crooks to George, when Lennie visits Crooks, and finally, …show more content…

This here's my room. Nobody got any right in here but me.’ “ (Steinbeck 68). Since Crooks was black, he couldn’t play cards with the other men, which means he was isolated from the other men. In addition, he was already an outsider since he was a Negro. At first, he acted as if he hated Lennie’s presence by saying, “Well go see your pup, then. Don’t come in a place where your not wanted.” Crooks acts as if he is not happy that someone came into his room, but after a while, when Lennie was going to leave, “Crooks scowled, but Lennie's disarming smile defeated him. ‘Come on in and set a while,’ Crooks said. ‘Long as you won't get out and leave me alone, you might as well set down.’ His tone was a little more friendly.” Crook recognizes that he is lonely, "This is just a nigger talkin', an' a busted-back nigger. So it don't mean nothing, see?" He says this because that was the way he was treated, not fairly and equally with white men. Steinbeck represents all the colored people in the book as Crooks, and implies that they are lonely and hated being segregated from the mainstream. Crooks used to have friends that were white that he used to play with when he was young, but now he is on the edge of society, alone because he was a …show more content…

In Of Mice and Men the law takes a big part in the story since Crooks is separated from the men. For example he sleeps alone and it was a rare occasion when Crooks was allowed to stay with men on Christmas Day. However one person in particular could use this law in her own favor, Curley’s Wife. When Crooks was making a stand and was rebelling against Curley’s Wife she said "Well, you keep your place then, Nigger. I could get you strung up on a tree so easy it ain't even funny." Crooks had reduced himself to nothing. There was no personality, no ego—nothing to arouse either like or dislike. He said, "Yes, ma'am," and his voice was toneless.” (Steinbeck 80) He responded like this not only because she was the boss’s son’s wife, but also because Crooks was an outsider since he was black. There was law that was kind of in favor of the white population, which segregated the colored population from the leaving them at the edge of

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