Discrimination In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

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The 1930s were a harsh time where racism, sexism, and discrimination triumphed. Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, is a thrilling novella conveying the hardships migrant workers faced.The story begins with Lennie, a mentally disabled man that physically towers over everyone, and George, and average man, going to work on a ranch. When they reach they farm we learn of Lennie’s past with women and meet the characters. Later in the book Lennie does something that leads him to the tragic resolution. Curley's wife is a well rounded character that faces discrimination, written by John Steinbeck, that can be viewed through the historical lens, power lens, and the gender lens. Using the historical lens, the reader can see that Curley’s wife faces discrimination. Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, states “ ‘If you can't look after your own God damn wife, what you expect me to do about it?’ ” (62). This quote is insisting that Curley's wife is only viewed as something that belongs to Curley, and is something he needs to keep track of. Even at the end of the book …show more content…

The only description that the audience receives of her is through the perspective of the men of the ranch, for example Candy says, “ ‘You God damn tramp,’ “ (95). The reader is made to dislike Curley's wife from the minute they meet her because of the way she's described and the trouble that the narrator implies will come due to her. In a letter written to Claire Luce by John Steinbeck it states, “ She is a nice, kind girl, not a floozy… If anyone-a man or woman- ever gave her a break- treated her like a person- she would be a slave to that person. Her craving for contact is immense… if you could ever break down a thousand little defenses she has built up, you would find a nice person, an honest person, and you would end up loving her. But such a thing could never happen,”(p.4-5). Curley's wife is perceived in a different tone through the gender

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