In 1930’s America, it was considered normal and acceptable to be a racist. Steinbeck uses the character Crooks, the victim, and Curly’s wife, a racist, to symbolise a racist society. Curly’s wife uses her status in society as a white woman to threaten Crooks. Through-out the novel, Crooks was segregated and isolated from everyone else and is also forced to live separately from the others on the ranch. Crooks was victimised purely because he was a black person, he was almost always called a “Nigger” which in the 1930’s was the world to describe a black person. Racism was never frowned upon in society nor in Steinbeck’s novel as it was a very normal thing to do and nobody considered how the people on the other end felt about it.
The friendship between Lennie and George in the novel is a rare friendship that is valued highly. Lennie and George were almost like brothers. In the 1930’s, American’s lost most of everything they had. Some people only had family and friends left with nothing else which is why family and friends were valued so much. Lennie and George stuck together through everything, even after the incident in Weed with Lennie. In the novel, Curly questions George’s motives towards the friendship of Lennie and him as it was not common for people to be travelling together or have friends. Their friendship