Essay Comparing The Necklace And The Great Depression

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Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck is about two men, George Milton and Lennie Small, who travel around with a dream to own their own piece of land. They seek a job after fleeing from Lennie’s recent accidental misconduct during a dreadful period of history, The Great Depression. Similarly, “The Necklace” by Guy de Maupassant regards a beautiful poverty-stricken woman named Mathilde who felt that she was born to enjoy a life full of luxury and glamour. She spends hours and hours daydreaming of a more expensive and ostentatious life though never works toward her dream. The characters’ unattainable dreams influence their lives, behavior, and relationships by keeping them motivated, disciplining themselves, and filling their lives with purpose. …show more content…

For instance, Monsieur Loisel from “The Necklace” sacrificed his own future to help Mathilde pay for the necklace just to make her happy. His goal of keeping Mathilde satisfied was very difficult to acquire considering that Mathilde was only pleased with what she could not have. Pleasing his wife motivated him to take the risk of giving up his own life and dreams to suit hers. In a working paper about goals becoming disorderly, the writers explain that “a negotiator who has obtained concessions sufficient to reach their goal, will satisfice and accept the agreement on the table, even if the value maximizing strategy would be to continue the negotiation process”(Ordóñez, Schweitzer, Galinsky, and Bazerman 10). People with hopes of achieving a difficult goal may become desperate over time and take advantage of anything that will help them do so. Monsieur Loisel saw that the only way to somewhat recover the necklace, was to go into debt and work their lives …show more content…

As an example, after George saw Curley’s wife’s corpse he said, “I’ll stay all night in some lousy cat house....an’ work another month and I’ll have fifty bucks more”(Steinbeck 95). After Lennie killed Curley’s wife, the dream was dead and no longer insight. Without it, George had no motivation to pursue anything, so he became like the other lonely ranch hands. According to an article, “Instead of just going through the motions and existing from day to day, your goals give you reasons to get up in the morning...”(Benefits of Goal Setting). George had an incentive of working and accumulating enough money to afford a piece of land. Now that that is gone, George just lives without any ambitions to go further in life nor to become something better. Without the dream and Lennie, George was lonesome, wistful, and

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