...CROOKS #1 - Crooks reads to cope with loneliness. ¨¨S’pose you had to sit out here an’ read books. Sure you could play horseshoes till it got dark, but then you got to read books¨(72). It is known that Crooks has a lot of books. ¨And he had books, too: a tattered dictionary and a mauled copy of the California civil code for 1905¨ (67). The definition of tattered is old and torn or in poor condition. The definition of mauled is to be wounded by scratching & tearing. The word choice is ordinary, but when the definition of the word is read it draws a dynamic picture. The book choice is also a bit funny, a dictionary and a copy of the civil code from 1905. The civil code is used to keep track of laws, or at least that is what Crooks would do. He would tear through the pages, examining his rights, perhaps after he was beaten or after he was thinking about his old life and what he used to be able to do. He knew he deserved better, but he also knew he was the minority. One voice can change the world but only if it comes a powerful source, and Crooks knew he wasn’t a powerful voice. He was a broken man, whose personality collapsed onto himself whenever he was faced with confrontation, who was beaten...
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...family problems that occur. Many people just give up, or they just don’t care anymore. For thousands of people this is the case. From the book Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck emphasizes that everyone has a dream that they are hoping to achieve someday, but for many others, they come a little short. One person from the book Of Mice and Men, named crooks, has always had a dream of being seen equal. Crooks has always wanted to have a normal life where he can be seen as a normal person that has friends, and can have a happy life other than being seen as another niger walking the streets. Something important Crooks didn’t realize is his place on the ranch. ““Well you keep your place then nigger. I could get you strung up on a tree so easy it ain’t even funny.”” (Steinbeck 81). It wasn’t only Crooks that got treated...
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...and a white plantation work, John Tibeats, they lynch him but he survives. This relates to Crooks in the book Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. Crooks is the only African American in the book and he gets treated poorly by white people. I feel sympathy for both Solomon and Crooks because they are treated terrible based on their skin color. Also in the book more characters face different challenges. In the book the characters Crooks, Lennie, and Curley’s wife deserve the most sympathy, because they face life situations, mental illness, and racism everyday in their lives. Curley’s wife deserves sympathy from all the life situations she faces everyday. She is the only women in the ranch and the author doesn’t even give her a real name. In the book she talks about how she could of had a chance to get a job and a life of herself but instead she got married to Curley. She says this when she...
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...Everyone has been mistreated to an extent. Whether it be big or small, it will still cause you to change things, or at least reexamine them. In Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men, Crooks is the perfect example. With Crooks being the only black man on the farm, the other men don't know how to treat him or even approach him. With Crooks having his very own sleeping quarters based off his skin color is very shameful and makes him feel very mistreated. “Cause I’m Black. They play in there, But I can’t play Because I’m black. They say I stink. Well, I tell you, All of you stink to me.”(68). This goes to show just how disgusted Crooks is with his mistreatment from the other ranch hands. You can tell by the wording in the quote that he is frustrated to...
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...John Steinbeck’s 1937 novel Of Mice and Men is a tale of two migrant workers in the Great Depression, who despite being complete contrasts of one and other, work together to survive the difficult lifestyle. George, the vastly more intelligent of the two, is a warden to Lennie, the colossal working machine who suffers from a mental condition. Steinbeck demonstrates the crippling loneliness the people of the ranch suffer from through his impeccable style. Steinbeck reveals via meticulous dialogue that discrimination is a leading cause of loneliness among the people of the ranch. For example, In Chapter 5, Curly’s wife goes to the barn to talk with Lennie while the other ranch hands play horseshoes, she proclaims, “Why can’t I talk to you? I never get to talk to nobody. I get awful lonely. (Steinbeck 86)”...
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...Of Mice and Men is one of the most widely assigned modern novels in high schools because of both its form and the issues that it raises. John Steinbeck’s reliance on dialogue, as opposed to contextual description, makes the work accessible to young readers, as does his use of foreshadowing and recurrent images. Equally important is the way in which he intertwines the themes of loneliness and friendship and gives dignity to those characters, especially Lennie and Crooks, who are clearly different from their peers. By focusing on a group of lonely drifters, Steinbeck highlights the perceived isolation and sense of “otherness” that can seem so overwhelming when one is growing up. Of Mice and Men is also important because it explores the way in which events can conspire against the realization of one’s dreams. It pits a group of flawed individuals against a set of circumstances that they are unable to master or, in the case of Lennie, even to comprehend. This is a theme that Steinbeck also explores in his classic novel The Grapes of Wrath (1939). When Steinbeck began Of Mice and Men, he was planning to write a children’s book called Something That Happened. His intent was to demonstrate that events often have a momentum of their own and need not reflect the existence of a higher power that is exacting punishment. Perhaps it was for this reason that he decided to retitle the book, drawing from Robert Burns’s oft-quoted poem “To a Mouse,” which contains the line “The best-laid...
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...Through a list of harsh truths, John Steinbeck’s novel Of Mice and Men casts humanity in an unfavorable light. These include loneliness, oppression, and imperfection. The grim realities of the hardworking characters are revealed through their actions to rise above challenges and in the end their defeats These truths are all used to build the complex main theme of friendship and the effect it can have on an individual's life. Of Mice and Men exposes the validity,loneliness, of people during the Great Depression. For instance Curly’s wife seeks attention ,positive or negative, from anyone on the ranch because of her isolation being the only woman present. When confronted with her isolation she says,“Wha’s the matter with me?Ain’t I got...
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...During the early and mid 1900’s, African Americans are endless victims of discrimination. They are seen as outcasts and are treated horribly. The events of discrimination are shown very well in the novels A Summer of Kings by Han Nolan and Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. Both of the books clearly show the themes of racism, segregation and gender inequality throughout the content of their storylines. Having these forms of discrimination in both of the novels, make the readers realize how much suffering these innocent people had to go through every single day of their lives because of the cruel societies around them. Both of the novels have events within them showing the segregation, racism and gender inequality that are associated with the theme of discrimination. The events that they endure every day are horrible and these events have made a mark on history. Every event that shows discrimination is embedded in history and in A Summer of Kings and Of Mice and Men, the authors have shown these events clearly and made the suffering real enough to clearly understand as the reader. In the book A Summer of Kings racism is a central issue. Han Nolan makes sure to inform the readers that the African-American people live in different cities than the white people do. King-Roy Johnston, who is a black man that has been accused of murdering a white man in Alabama. When he comes to live with her family, Esther’s neighbour Pip is not so happy about this when he says “You think...
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...deported people of mexican descent, 400,000 were repatriated, sometimes against their will. In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men, there are many overarching themes, these themes help the author show the hard times of the Great Depression. One such theme would be the prevalence of loneliness in many of the characters. Another theme would be the discrimination against a number of characters, in the different forms such as sexism and racism. Lastly, many dreams in the novel go unfulfilled leaving many characters with the weight of failure. Throughout the Great Depression human compassion was as rare as a job, this led to widespread loneliness, that, in turn, is apparent...
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...Cruelty is unavoidable in society, always has been and will likely continue to be throughout many centuries to come. Capturing the cruelty of society is a concept that William Golding and John Steinbeck both vividly exemplify. Steinbeck’s use of racism and discrimination through characters powerfully demonstrates cruelty. Golding illustrates cruelty through examples of bullying, self-preservation, and abandonment. However, although man's cruelty to other men is expressed clearly in William Golding's work, Lord of the Flies, as well as John Steinbeck's novel, Of Mice and Men, they are both epitomize the concept in alternative ways. In Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, cruelty is shown by targeting people over things they can’t control,...
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...Some may view the Great Depression as the loneliest and most isolated period in American history for the people who experienced it first hand. It can be difficult to really capture the essence of the need for companionship that was immensely present in the Great Depression. However, when John Steinbeck uses the dialogue of Crooks, the actions of Curley's wife, and multiple characters undergoing major inconveniences for friendship it openly depicts the need for companionship in his novel, "Of Mice and Men". The primary way that Steinbeck portrays loneliness and the need for companionship, is through the articulation of the character Crooks. Initially, this can be viewed when Crooks expresses that he feels unheard and that nobody listens...
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...Discrimination in Of Mice and Men All throughout American history, minorities have been mistreated. In the John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, prejudice influences the way the ranchers treat others. Curley’s Wife, Crooks, and Candy are excluded because of gender, race, age, or disability. This bias results in these people feeling lonely and inferior. In Steinbeck’s novella, multiple characters experience alienation due to discrimination by other ranchers. Throughout the novella, Curley’s Wife is isolated from the male workers several times due to her gender. This is portrayed when the men in the bunkhouse argue with Curley about his wife, when they try to avoid Curley’s Wife because they view her as a nothing more than a distraction because they think her beauty is her only valuable characteristic. Carlson says, “Why’n’t you...
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...Of Mice and Men Kiescha Giles Of mice and men is a novel written by author John Steinbeck, published in 1937. It’s about George Milton and lennie small, two displaced workers. Who move from place to place in California in search for new job opportunities during the great depression in United States of America? John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men is a fable about what it means to be human. Steinbeck's story of George and Lennie's ambition of owning their own ranch, and the obstacles that stand in the way of that ambition, reveal the nature of dreams, dignity, loneliness, and sacrifice. Ultimately, Lennie, the mentally handicapped giant who makes George's dream of owning his own ranch worthwhile, ironically becomes the greatest obstacle to achieving...
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...Characters Lennie Although Lennie is among the principal characters in Of Mice and Men, he is perhaps the least dynamic. He undergoes no significant changes, development, or growth throughout the novel and remains exactly as the reader encounters him in the opening pages. Simply put, he loves to pet soft things, is blindly devoted to George and their vision of the farm, and possesses incredible physical strength. Nearly every scene in which Lennie appears confirms these and only these characteristics. Although Steinbeck’s insistent repetition of these characteristics makes Lennie a rather flat character, Lennie’s simplicity is central to Steinbeck’s conception of the novel. Of Mice and Men is a very short work that manages to build up an extremely powerful impact. Since the tragedy depends upon the outcome seeming to be inevitable, the reader must know from the start that Lennie is doomed, and must be sympathetic to him. Steinbeck achieves these two feats by creating a protagonist who earns the reader’s sympathy because of his utter helplessness in the face of the events that unfold. Lennie is totally defenseless. He cannot avoid the dangers presented by Curley, Curley’s wife, or the world at large. His innocence raises him to a standard of pure goodness that is more poetic and literary than realistic. His enthusiasm for the vision of their future farm proves contagious as he convinces George, Candy, Crooks, and the reader that such a paradise might be possible. But he is a character...
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...Prejudice and bias are a recurring theme in John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men. Nearly every character in this book has had some sort of bias or prejudice against them, such as Crooks because of his color, Curly’s wife for being a woman, and even Candy’s dog for being old, frail and smelly. Prejudice and bias are based on a lack of empathy for a person. This leads to a animosity developing between people. Crooks is one character who faces prejudice and bias to the fullest extent due to his color. Crooks is often referred to by derogatory slurs and is excluded from any friendly interaction with the other men in the barn. For example, according to Of Mice and Men, it states, “ I ain’t wanted in the bunk house, and you ain’t wanted in my room.”[Crooks...
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