Feminist Lens In John Steinbeck's Novel 'Of Mice And Men'

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Lizzie Ritchie Mr. Schneidewent English 11 13 October 2015 Of Mice and Men Literary Analysis Five Paragraph Essay Curley’s wife is a complex, main character in John Steinbeck’s novella, “Of Mice and Men”. She is introduced as an insignificant secondary character, but evidently posses the importance of causing the end of the novella. Despite the weight of her role, her value is hindered because of the culture towards women in the 1930s. Steinbeck uses imagery, foreshadowing, and metaphors to show loneliness analyzed through a Feminist Lens. From her first appearance in the story, Curley’s wife is described as a different kind of threat, one who is all artifice and manipulation from her red lips and fingernails to her red mules, “on the insteps of which were little bouquets of red ostrich feathers” (Steinbeck 31). The imagery Steinbeck uses, paints her as a woman who is quite bold, but fragile with a passionate essence. …show more content…

After her death, the setting sun is low and growing soft. The sun is a metaphor for her dreams being ended, or the sun setting on her life. When the girl is first described, she is described with bright colors and strong images. After Lennie accidentally kills her, those sparks of life are extinguished. The metaphorical sun has set on her life. As the description continues, it is noted that “the meanness and the plannings and the discontent and the ache for attention were all gone from her face” (Steinbeck 92). Death seems to have reduced her to society 's idealized version of a female. Right after the death of Curley 's wife, there is imagery of her purity and serenity in death. She is shown in a positive light for the first time in the novella, and provides contrast to what has just happened. Her appearance in the story seemed irrelevant until her death made her an important element to the narrative. She finally received recognition, but not the type she had longed

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