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Darwinian Trend In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

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The thesis of Of Mice and Men could certainly be; the world conspires to crush the weak. The novel contains a nearly Darwinian trend of survival of the fittest. Characters that are either physically or mentally weak suffer more so than those that are not. A symbolic representation of this trend is the scene in which Carlson kills Candy’s old dog. Carlson pesters Candy to allow him to put the old dog out of misery, to which Candy reluctantly agrees. Candy is in some ways much like his dog, old and past his prime working years, Candy realizes that when he loses his job he, “won’t have no place to go, an, … can’t get no more jobs.”(60). In the society Steinbeck describes, there is no place for those unfit to work, and as a result the weak end

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