Curley’s wife is a villain because she shows some villainess signs that she had never shown before like say to Lennie that she was happy about it happening to him and let Lennie touch and feel her hair until her untimely death when Lennie grab her frightenly and twisted her neck so she would stop screaming. Here are some evidence that she is a villain…
In the 1937 novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck there is a very powerful aspect of male dominance in the text. From a feminist’s point of view this story degrades women, and categorizes them as sexual objects.…
In the Book Of Mice And Men, “she's a jailbate set on a trigger”from George…
Initially the character of Curley’s Wife is described to the readers by the men on the ranch that George and Lennie last work on, in their conversations with each other, before Curley’s Wife’s character is fully introduced with speech and description of physical appearance. Expressions, such as the idiom “she got the eye”, are used to describe her, implying that she is promiscuous and flirtatious, something that is later emphasised by her being referred to by the derogatory term of “tart£, implying that she is suggestive and perhaps even similar to a prostitute in terms of the way she portrays herself. The word “tart” could also suggest that she presents herself flamboyantly in front of the men at the ranch, illustrating her desperation for attention. The fact that she is married and is still promiscuous and portrays herself flamboyantly in front of other men could suggest that she is unfaithful and immoral, or alternatively that her sexual needs are not fulfilled by her husband, providing a reasonable explanation to why Curley wears a glove “fulla vasaline”, something that is seen as “dirty” by George. She is described to be “heavily made up” which could add to her being unfaithful and untrue as she almost is disguised and covered up by cosmetics, covering her real natural appearance. Steinbeck purposefully conveys Curley’s Wife negatively through the ranch men in order to create an initial pessimistic and hateful approach toward her character by the readers.…
Have you ever experienced the painful grip of loneliness while searching for companionship? Or had your heart set on a dream that you knew was out of your reach? These realistic examples describe the battle of human nature within the characters Of Mice and Men. In fact, the characters Of Mice and Men undergo these emotions on an unexpected journey. As the journey unfolds into a quest, the characters gain unexpected personal growth.…
The Swiss psychiatrist and influential thinker of the twientieth century, Dr. Carl Jung, contended that the healthy man does not torture others--generally, it is the tortured who turn into torturers. His statement proves true with the personages of Crooks and Curley. When the racially isolated Crooks, the stable worker, finds Lennie in the barn, he is hostile and then taunts him cruelly:…
In John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, the two main characters, George and Lennie, frequently run into Curley, a contentious and hostile man. Curley is one of the main sources of conflict in the book, as we see when George warns Lennie: “…You gonna have trouble with that Curley guy… He’s gonna take a sock at you the first chance he gets” (Steinbeck, 29). Curley is representative of aggression and oppression, which Steinbeck shows us in both Curley’s actions and words.…
This quotation allows the reader to see that, while being poor might have been quiet difficult, being lonely was a worse situation to be stuck in. Steinbeck seemed say, that Lennie and George’s case was different than most; they both had someone who genuinely cared for them, who looked after them, and someone to talk to when needed the most. It was easier to handle being a ranch-hand when there was someone always there to help you out. They were a small family, but a family nonetheless. This quote allows the reader to see how lucky they felt to have each other.…
Of Mice and Men is an example of why we need to be our brother’s keeper.…
Steinbeck introduces us to Curley’s wife through the opinion of Candy. His views and opinions are misogynistic, when he calls her a ‘tart’, making the reader prejudiced towards Curley’s wife before we even meet her. Candy mentions that she ‘got the eye’ explaining that she is being flirtatious and immoral as we are told that she is flirt with other men straight after we are told that she married to Curley. Candy makes us anticipate her entrance ‘Wait till you see Curley’s wife’, Steinbeck uses this technique to make the reader want to read on and find out more.…
Steinbeck uses Curley’s wife to represent how many women in the 1930s were classed below men, and how this prejudice allowed their lives to be defined by the men around them. In this passage, Steinbeck has manipulated Curley’s wife’s appearance in order to reinforce our pre judged feelings towards her, based on gossip and rumours told by Candy.…
Imagine always cleaning up your friend’s messes. You are always the one to fix things up after your friend does something wrong or even worse, you must be the one to end it. In the novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, a man named George and his friend Lennie, travel to find work after Lennie is accused of rape from touching a lady’s dress. During their work on the ranch, Lennie accidentally kills a worker’s wife. Readers may think that Lennie has a harder life than George because he is mentally challenged and isn’t able to be on his own without trouble. Although, George lives a much harder life than Lennie because George has decided to kill his best friend, Lennie for Lennie’s sake and George is always given trouble from Lennie. George has a harder life than Lennie because Lennie always gives George…
In John Steinbeck’s “Of Mice and Men” Curly wife is shown as a person with very…
Dreams. All people have dreams, things they want, things they want to achieve in life. Eventually, everyone’s life will come to an end and we all know it. When we reach a certain point in our older lives, we will probably just want to be happy and enjoy our lives. In The book “Of Mice and Men,” candy is an old man who spent his life working on a farm. Candy loses his hand and when George and Lennie appear with their “dream” of owning land, Candy begs to join the “dream.” Candy lost everything including his beloved dog; he is desperate. This leads to my question, why did Steinbeck choose to make Candy join the dream over any other character? Steinbeck chose Candy to join the dream because he is the most desperate and Steinbeck wanted to…
In John Steinbeck's novel, Of Mice and Men, Curley's wife …………… Most of the characters in the novel admit to a strong feeling of loneliness but Curley’s wife’s loneliness is distinguishable from the rest because she is the only female on the ranch, which means that she can’t relate to anybody. She isn’t able to get comfort or support from her husband either because he only thinks of her as à trophy or possession instead of a person with feelings and emotions. Instead of giving Curley’s wife the respect she deserves, Curley made it clear that she was to stay at home all day, bored and alone, and not to interact with the ranchers. In chapter three, she says after Curley and the other men went to town “Think I don’t like to talk to somebody ever’…