Rhetorical Analysis Of Curley's Wife

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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

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