Comparing the Themes of Wuthering Heights and Of Mice and Men

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Comparing the Themes of Wuthering Heights and Of Mice and Men

Wuthering Heights and Of Mice and Men are two novels that were written approximate hundred years apart by different authors living in different time periods. Wuthering Heights, was written by Emily Bronte who lived in England. Of Mice and Men was written by John Steinbeck who lived in California. Although they were written by different authors of different background, time, and place. One could nevertheless find similar themes between the two books.

In Wuthering Heights, it described vividly the goal of Heathcliff and Catherine, who wanted to be with one and another. However, when Catherine rejected Heathcliff, he turned his potential of dream of good into evil. It also reflected the Heathcliff was prejudged by Mrs. Earnshaw, Hindley, Edgar, Mr. and Mrs. Linton. It also showed that love and hate between Heathcliff and Catherine made their relationships quite intense.

Like the Wuthering Heights, Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck portrayed George and Lennie's one dream that one day they will own their own farm. It also described in detail the various ways of prejudice of Crooks and the white population. Finally, it manifested the love and hatred George had for Lennie. Wuthering Heights and Of Mice and Men are two very different but in the same time identical in the general theme of potential of dreams for good and evil, and love and hate between friends and lovers, and finally that of prejudice of the minority.

In Wuthering Heights, Heathcliff and Catherine shared one dream, dream of being with each other. Heathcliff suffers much emotional rejection, but at no point does he falter ...

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...p? Lennie would call George a friend, but George would perhaps be hard-pressed to admit the same of Lennie. As he tells Slim, he has simply become so used to having Lennie around that he "can't get rid of him". Despite his vexation, George also demonstrates protectiveness, patience, and pride when it comes to Lennie. He is perhaps motivated to stay with Lennie by a sense of love of friendship.

The conclusions of those two novels are also very similar, just like the themes. The dreams of Heathcliff, Catherine, Lennie, and George all perished like a bubble. The various prejudice found between both books, many characters with prejudged because of their color, size, intelligence, and sex. The love and hate conflict always end up with hate: Heathcliff's was hated by everyone, he hated Catherine, and George's hatred caused him kill his friend.

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