Curley’s wife expresses her suffering of loneliness and boredom to the men by asking for compassion. To Curley’s wife, loneliness means the lack of social interactions and conversations. Boredom means the repetitiveness of her daily life. She tries to explain her situation to the men by asking rhetorical questions about certain aspects of her life. Curly’s wife had just walked into the stable room to figure out where her husband is. She encounters Crooks, Candy, and Lennie who give her a difficult time when she tries to have a conversation with them. She is asking for compassion when she says, “Think I don’t like to talk to somebody ever’ once in a while? Think I like to stick in that house all the time?” (77) The tone and wording of this suggests that she is asking a rhetorical question in an attempt to get the men to feel for her. …show more content…
She doesn’t encounter many people, let alone those who want to have a conversation with her which makes her feel lonely. When she says “somebody” it shows how desperate she is to have a conversation. Somebody implies that it could be anyone. She wants her daily routine to differ each day. She then describes how she feels about her home. She refers to it as a “house”, which represent the lack of emotional connection she shares with it. The house is symbolic of her loneliness because when she is in her house, she is usually by herself. When she is alone, she doesn’t have many things to do which causes her to be bored. She also refers to her house as “that” house which shows that she feels like she doesn’t have a deep connection with
Curley’s wife comes off as a provocative, flirtatious, lustful woman, but is really hiding her true identity as a depressed and lonely person. Throughout the book Curley’s wife does show her true identity, but still tries to stay positive and deal with the bad hand she was dealt. Curley’s wife is a prime example of even though your life took a wrong turn that you shouldn’t give up. Curley’s wife may of been depressed, but she still tried to communicate everyday with someone no matter what they said to her.
The novel Of Mice and Men, written by John Steinbeck, contains many characters that would significantly change the plot if they were not there to be in it. One of these characters is Curley. Curley is a minor character who plays a large role. He is like the bully of the story and is the cause of many of the events that take place on the ranch. There are multiple ways that the story would change if Curley was non-existent.
She needed people to talk to, like the others do. “A guy goes nuts if he ain't got nobody. Don't make no difference who the guy is, long's he's with you. I’ll tell ya a guy gets too lonely and he gets sick.” (Steinbeck, 72-73). Crooks has shown us that he truly needs someone however he can’t because he is different. This goes for Curley's wife as well. Those who are different are lonely because no one wants to get involved with them. When she is lonely, Curley's wife goes to talk to people but they never accept request. “I get lonely, you can talk to people but I can't talk to nobody but curly. Else he gets mad. How’d you like not to talk to anybody?” (Steinbeck, 87). Curley's wife explains that she is lonely. However, no one really notices it. She knows that she is claimed by someone she does not love. She only wants someone else to talk to him. Have her being viewed the way she was, was unlikely to happen. Being the woman on the ranch was awfully hard to live happy. She knew that they won't talk to her, so depression became a factor.
I chose this word because the tone of the first chapter seems rather dark. We hear stories of the hopes with which the Puritans arrived in the new world; however, these hopes quickly turned dark because the Purtains found that the first buildings they needed to create were a prison, which alludes to the sins they committed; and a cemetery, which contradicts the new life they hoped to create for themselves.
“In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage.” - John Steinbeck. Curley throughout the story, whenever he came in, there was always a negative vibe going on. Events he’s in, usually goes downhill for him or some other major character, he’s always bringing out bad events in the story, from when he wants to kill people, from when he wants to hurt people, Curley is someone who brings bad events to him, and the characters around him. Curley’s actions throughout the story has proved him to be a belligerent, unemotional, and cocky character.
As Stephen M.R. Covey once said, “We judge ourselves by our intentions and others by their behaviour.” Likewise, while one can directly view her as a slut for her flirtatious manner, others can infer that Curley’s Wife justifies her actions for her loneliness. In conclusion, Curley’s Wife is presented as a misunderstood person with a hidden dream, desire for recognition, and intriguing character interactions whose poignant story sets her up as a sympathetic figure. Indeed, it seems that in a world dominated by men, one woman had to solely endure the plight of gender oppression, with the cost eventually being death
Gosh I really hate being stuck inside this stupid small house all alone all day long. It’s always so boring and I have nothing to. I wish Curley would just let me go outside and talk to the other guys here. What does he think I’m going to do? Cheat on him? Thats crazy. I mean yea I flirt with the other guys, and I dress kind of inappropriately. But I mean beauty is my only power here and I flirt just to annoy Curley because he don't ever do anything for me. The only thing he ever did for me was keep a glove full of Vaseline on his hand to ‘keep it soft for me’. “What do you think, Slim?”
In section four Lennie, Crooks, Candy, and Curley’s wife are left on the farm because they are considered lesser. Lennie isn’t brought along with them because he has a mental disability and George does not want to take care of him while he is trying to have a good time. In some situations -for example doing farm work- Lennie can be helpful, but in this situation, he is a burden. Crooks is left behind because he is African American. Is this time period African Americans did not have equal rights, and although most of the men on the farm respected him as a worker, they would not consider him a friend or an equal. Candy is left behind because he is older. They cannot relate to him the same way they can with each other and it would be a nuisance for them to have to drag an old man to a brothel. Finally Curley’s wife is left behind because she is a woman. She will never be “one of the guys” and will certainly not be brought to a brothel. In fact, Curley did not even want his wife to know he was at a brothel. Curley’s wife describes the situation the best, “‘They left all the weak ones here,’ she said finally.”(p.77) All the ones left behind are the ones who aren’t viewed by everyone else as equal or normal.
Everyone has a dream they want to achieve. It's what pushes them to do their best. In this novel the author, John Steinbeck , the American dream is mentioned over and over again. Many of the characters in the novel have dreams and they are mentioned throughout the book whether the character was Candy, Lennie, George, or even Curley’s wife.
How desperate do lonely people get? This book is titled of Mice and Men written by John Steinbeck. In this book there is a character who goes by the name of Curley’s wife, she flirts with everyone around the farm. Near the end of the book Lennie, a mentally challenged man, strangled her to death by accident. In this book Curley’s wife is a villain because she threatened the life of Crooks, she treated everyone she talked to with very little respect, and she wished harm upon her husband.
The american dream is different for others. If there were no american dream people wouldn't try to achieve a goal. The american dreams has power to make people try to achieve something in life. Society seems to have forgotten that in many respects, the pursuit is the happiness which means that happiness and security should not be granted at birth.
Curley’s wife represents every woman in society who is insecure in life in someway; therefore, eroding people and society’s trust. Meaning they are lead by their insecurities to do things that they shouldn’t do; therefore, causing people and society to lose trust in the insecure person. Specifically, Curley’s wife is insecure because of how her life is rather than how it could’ve been. Subsequently, this leads to regret, which is contagious like the flu: regret leads to her doing things and acting out in ways that she shouldn’t; therefore, she is receiving attention from others. Just like all the other women in society she had her life picked for her; this makes her feel like she has no power over her own life so she tries to do things
Curley’s wife suffers from loneliness also. Her only companion is very controlling. Curley makes sure his wife doesn’t talks to anyone. She is a victim of herself because she married a man that she hardly even knew. She married him though to have a companion. She killed herself and Lennie because of her need for companionship. She craves companionship because she is an attractive woman with need for interaction. Curley’s wife says,” Think I don’t like to talk to somebody ever’ once in a while? (Pg. 77)”.
In Of Mice & Men, the character Curley’s Wife is depicted as flirtatious, promiscuous, and insensitive. However, her husband Curley sees her as only a possession. Most of the workers at the ranch see her as a tart, whereas Slim, the peaceful and god-like figure out of all the men, see her as lonely. This answer will tell us to which extent, is Curley’s wife a victim, whether towards her flirtatious behaviour, or to everyone’s representation of her.
I think that the narrator feels much alone in life, even though she has a family who cares for her. She is clinically depressed so naturally she is going to feel isolated from the world. Speaking about a house that the narrator grew up in, she writes, 'and there was one chair that always seemed like a strong friend.