Preview

Curleys Wife

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
373 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Curleys Wife
hi... idk what to write I just need to view one essay so blah blah blah hhehehehehehe fjsfjsopfjg the end.

English Essay Plan
I am going to be doing my essay on Curley’s wife from the novel of mice and men.
HEROIC VILLAN
Mental strength racists confident Talks about Curley
Lonely Inappropriate rude

John Steinbeck at the beginning of the novel creates dislike towards Curley’s wife. However by the end of the novel we feel sympathy for her.

Steinbeck uses many different techniques to present Curley’s wife such as…
Colour imagery
Appearance
Metaphors
Similes
Dialogue
Foreshadowing
Descriptive words

QUOTES
The rectangle of sunshine in the doorway was cut off
Tart
Ever'body out doin' som'pin'. Ever'body! An' what am i doin'? Standin' here talkin' to a bunch of bindle stiffs—a nigger an' a dum-dum and a lousy ol' sheep—an' likin' it because they ain't nobody else." well, you keep your place then, nigger. I could get you strung up on a tree so easy it ain't even funny.
‘I never get to talk to nobody. I get awful lonely.’
‘I could made somethin’ of myself…Maybe I will yet.’
‘Coulda been in the movies.’
‘I don’t like Curley. He ain’t a nice fella.’
On Lennie ‘Jus’ like a big baby.’
‘Her body flopped like a fish’
‘He pawed up the hay.’

CONTEXT
Curley’s wife is the only women at the ranch, women in 1930’s America where treated as less just like Curley’s wife. Women where seen as unintelligent and this is just like Steinbeck portrays Curley’s wife. Also in 1930’s America blacks and whites did not get along. There were many segregated places like hospitals and church’s etc. people where racists just like Curley’s wife was towards Crooks.
Curley’s Wife

Curley's wife knows her beauty is her power, and she uses it to flirt with the men at the ranch and make her husband jealous.
Steinbeck at the beginning portrays Curley’s wife to be mean and seductive.
She brings evil into the men’s lives by tempting them in a way they

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Curleys Wife

    • 327 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Sycamore: any of several North American plane trees, especially Platanus occidentalis, having shallowly lobed ovate leaves, globular seed heads, and wood valued as timber.…

    • 327 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    everybody out doin’ som’pin’. Ever’body! An’ what am i doin”? Standin’ here talkin’ to a bunch…

    • 572 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Steinbeck also shows that Curley’s Wife is a danger on the farm. When she enters the room , ‘both men glanced up, for the rectangle of sunshine in the doorway was cut off’. This imagery could symbolise the dark and danger that Curley’s Wife brings with her. Some of that danger is, she could commit adultery with men on the farm. As the book is set during the 1930s where…

    • 632 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Curley S Wife Essay

    • 484 Words
    • 1 Page

    like the reader to think the same way about Curley’s wife as him and that’s why he describes…

    • 484 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Steinbeck uses many different techniques to present Curley's wife such as colour imagery, appearance, metaphors and similes in the early stages of the novel. The effect of these techniques is that the reader creates a mental image of Curley's wife even before she even enters the novel.…

    • 1130 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Central to Steinbeck’s novel is Curley’s Wife and her importance in the novel is of how she revolves around the novels main themes and events. Curley’s Wife is excluded for being female, she is often found in search for companionship on the ranch as her newly found marriage does not give her the affection she desires, as she states to Lennie “I don’t like Curley he aint a nice fella.” Because of this she often tries to interact with the other men although she is never allowed as they think a “ranch aint no place for a girl.” Carlson also states of how a “women should be at home where she belongs.” The fact that she is excluded from a place of physical work is indicative of how women were portrayed during the 1930’s. They were not expected to do work, but instead stay at home and raise a family. Curley’ wife feels insecure because of the loneliness she feels and it is made clear she is frustrated with this situation, “none of them care how I gotta live.”…

    • 593 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the Steinbeck’s novel ‘OF MICE AND MEN’ he uses description to present Curley’s wife in different ways. Curley’s wife doesn’t have a name in this novel. When he described her as a ‘girl’, it shows that she is too young to be married. As well as that he described her as “heavily made up” this makes the reader think her appearance seems to be out of place on the farm. Steinbeck wants us to realise that she is not the part of the workers on the ranch and is an outside “looking in?” this makes the reader think she dislike, unpopular and wants to be friendly with them. Additionally the writer explained that “appearance” is important to Curley’s wife and she wants to look pretty. This makes the reader consider that she doesn’t have friends and she is lonely. Also she is trying to get attention making herself good-looking. Red is pretty much the only colour mentioned on the ranch and red is the colour of danger and warning. The only colour used to describe Curley’s wife…

    • 1570 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Curley’s wife is the only female on the ranch and is described in a very feminine and incongruous manner, “full, rouged lips and wide spaced eyes, heavily made-up. Her fingernails were red. Her hair hung in little rolled clusters, like sausages. She wore a cotton house dress and red mules, on the insteps of which were little bouquets of red ostrich feathers”. The bold, heavily made-up appearance matches her personality as she disguises her true feelings and emotions with lies like the colourful, interesting appearance disguises her lonely, isolated life. As the only woman, she is segregated from the ranch society and Steinbeck makes her seem more isolated and friendless by never giving her a name but being identified as Curley’s possession. She is seen throughout the novella searching constantly for Curley yet this is just an excuse to talk to the other people, ““I’m looking for Curley,” she said, her voice had a nasal, brittle quality.” She struggles to create friends or let alone have a civilised conversation with the men on the ranch. She uses this feminine appearance and flirtatious, predatory behaviour in an attempt to communicate and attract attention to herself. However this backfires and leaves her in a no-win situation as her heavily sexualised manner is the key point of criticism amongst the men as they describe her as a “tart” and “a piece of jail bait” who, if approached, will only lead to trouble as she can ultimately cause the destruction of their own versions of the ‘American Dream’. Her isolation throughout the novella is caused by her gender, sexual appearance and predatory…

    • 285 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Society in the 1930’s discriminated heavily against women; they were essentially objects, whose sole purpose in life was to serve their husbands, objects that were to be simply seen, and not heard. Steinbeck presents the female genders lack of identity and individuality in 1930’s society by deliberately not naming Curley’s wife. Her missing a name emphasizes her second-class citizenship. The woman has no name because she is just an object, the "property" of someone else. Curley’s wife is deemed unimportant, victimized as a direct result of her gender, the majority of male characters in the novel have names, even Crooks; the stable buck, who because of his race is probably viewed as being beneath Curley’s wife in terms of society’s classification. Curley's wife can only be seen in reference to her husband, who (supposedly) owns and controls her body, and by extension, her.…

    • 765 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Curley’s wife is a young, pretty woman, who is mistrusted by her husband, Curley. The other characters refer to her only as ‘Curley's wife,’ which is significant as she is the only character in the novel without a name. She is a simple object or possession belonging to her husband and this shows the severity of the sexual discrimination in America in 1930s. I believe Steinbeck would have thought of her not as a person but a symbol. Almost everyone on the ranch is lonely and she symbolises this. The audience would come to believe she is a weak isolated character however, the men are fearful of her. She is the wife of their boss. She has power and this power creates fear among the ranch workers. She is both in charge and screaming for attention.…

    • 1062 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Curley's wife has many different relationships with people in the novel. Steinbeck conveys the impression that her…

    • 533 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The only female character in the novel whose name has been given to readers as Curley’s Wife is a paradox within her own life and its circumstances, and where she ended up as a result. Throughout the novel she was upset at the way she was living because she claimed that she could have “ ‘...been in the movies, an[d] had nice clothes...’ ” however the unfortunate truth was that she was stuck living the life she was living (Steinbeck 89). This as well as the fact that readers constantly saw her as mean and toxic, but only in her death they saw her as she truly was; “... the meanness and the plannings and the discontent and the ache for attention were all gone…” and she looked very plain and beautiful (Steinbeck 92-93). She, much like many other characters in the novel, had a dream for herself. However the fact is that she unfortunately failed to see that dream become a reality. Steinbeck used the paradox in the way the men on the ranch saw her to show how unfairly treated she was. He showed this through her death, displayed as pure and beautiful, unlike the manipulative creature readers had come to know thanks to the perception of the men. It is unfortunate that she never lived long enough to pursue her dreams, instead stuck in a place where she was not happy and trapped in a failing marriage. The paradox is simple, she had dreams, and they were crushed. Not everybody, as saddening as it is, gets to live their ideal life. Most do, but some tend to stop…

    • 1216 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Curley’s wife is the only female character in the story who is never given a proper, and is only mentioned in reference to her husband. The men on the farm refer to her as a “tramp”, a “tart”, and a “looloo”, and she represents the temptation of female sexuality in a male-dominated world. Steinbeck depicts Curley’s wife not as a villain, but rather as a victim. Like the ranch-hands, she is desperately lonely and has broken dreams of a better life. For example, she tells Lennie, “I get lonely. You can talk to people, but I can’t talk to nobody but Curley.” (95) This shows how aware she is about Curley’s insecurity, which causes her to converse with the other men in secret. Curley expects his wife to do as he tells her at all times, and expects her to isolate herself from everyone else and to only talk to him. In addition, Curley’s wife also adds after discovering where Curley had gone too “Think I don’t know where they all went? Even Curley?” (77) Curley’s wife despises the requirements and demands her husband has over her, fully knowing that Curley is unfaithful to her. Using this against her husband, Curley’s wife does the exact opposite of what he tells demands of her, and does as she wants whenever Curley isn’t around, and tries to have the guys understand that all she needs is a friend. Curley’s wife, being a woman, is expected to obey a man at all times, but since she is a free-spirited woman, she…

    • 984 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Curley and His Wife

    • 643 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Curly is arrogant, self-centered and jealous. His wife is a flirt and definitely lacks the attention (the right kind of attention) she should receive from her husband. She's a trophy, and he treats her as such. They had a short engagement (they married the night they met), and Curly's wife, from the little we really know about her married Curly for little more than to get away from her mother.…

    • 643 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One of the most intriguing characters in the novel is Curley’s wife, who is never given a name, as to represent the treatment of women during the era. She is introduced as a character you are meant to dislike, promiscuous and seemingly out for trouble. Throughout the novel in the time leading up to her murder, we learn that she is not working to harm the people around her, but rather working to satisfy the sadness that stems from her lowly place in the world. She expresses this feeling when she states "Seems like they ain't none of them cares how I gotta live." Explaining how her “promiscuity” is actually just a cry for attention, showing that she isn’t the happy flirty woman she is made out to be, rather a fairly depressed and unhappy woman who wants to find ways to lift herself up.…

    • 926 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays