George and Lennie’s American dream it was about to have their own piece of land for themselves to have nobody else to tell them what to do, with a little house, 10 ten rabbits, Chickens and a cow to have milk and eggs to eat in the early morning for breakfast, also having a big patch of vegetables and during the winter do not care about go to work and set around the fire stove listening to the rain coming down on the roof being just Lennie and George together to see before for each other and take care of…
They have a dream of owning their own little house and lots of land with a farm filled with animals and gardens. A place where they could go and do whatever they want without anyone having to boss them around. George and Lennie await the freedom and independence they deserve after working long and hard. They constantly remind each other of their dreams and goals and take the steps to make it come true.…
By looking at the main characters, George and Lennie individually, one can see the contrast between them in both physical appearances and their nature. For George, “every part of him was defined”, while Lennie is the exact opposite as he was “a huge man, shapeless of face, with large pale eyes and sloping shoulders” (Steinbeck,2). Their differences help create an idea that together they can achieve anything put across their path, especially the American dream. With George being the leader of the pair, his desire to keep Lennie…
As technology and people have advanced, the American dream has progressed and has been altered from its true original form. The Legacy that once ruled America ended up with a modern twist. The American dream is that idea or not achievement that people make their life long gold. However, we may question how the American dream has been shaping American life styles. In the novel Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck portrays the American dream and how it has been altered throughout many years and also how some people never attain it.…
Of Mice and Men is a novel in which John Steinbeck, the author, portrays many broken dreams. Steinbeck is a famous author known for many books like “The Grapes of Wrath,” and “The Long Valley.” The book was published in 1994 by Penguin Classics. The book is geared towards teenagers and above. The genre of the book is considered novella. George and Lennie, the main characters, show what it’s like to live as a migrant worker in the early 1900’s. In “Of Mice and Men” Steinbeck shows dreams can easily be broken by character’s actions and the world they were born into.…
Life takes turns for better and for worse, but being there to help your best friend in need always comes first. Even when it changes one's plans, it is an important part of life. Since Lennie has made the mistake of killing Curley’s wife, George will never get the American Dream that he was wanting and planning for. “‘I think I knowed from the very first. I think I knowed we’d never do her. He [Lennie] usta like to hear about it so much I got to thinking maybe he would”’ (Steinbeck 94). Lennie has heard George talk about how they are going to get their American Dream. Yet, George has heard this over and over. Therefore, he believes that it is set in stone.…
Lennie and George have been trying to get their “dream farm” for a while now, and Lennie although he doesn’t know it, through direct correlations of his actions he has just destroyed even the slightest possibility of it coming true. The “dream farm” almost became a reality, but due to Lennie and George’s actions this will never happen.…
From the first mention of the dream where Lennie asks George to tell him about their future together, to get "a flat a land" and how Lennie will "tend the rabbits", to Lennie’s last words; "let's do it now, I wanna get that place now".…
All four characters have aspirations that affect them throughout the book. George, Lennie, and Candy are all motivated by their hope for the future, they constantly work towards their dream; however, Curley’s wife lived her life wishing that she would’ve pursued her dreams. The idea of having their own land excites Lennie very much. He dreams of taking care of the rabbits and other animals. George hopes this dream comes true so that he can lead a "better"…
Every being in the world is reliant on hopes and dreams. Ambitious or temporary, big or small Of Mice and Men implies the predominant theme of ‘belonging’. The four main characters: George, Lennie, Curley’s wife and Crooks show their strong desire for this. Steinbeck gets the message across, that with dreams, anything can be conquered.…
For George and Lennie, their American dream was to live on a farm without a boss and have rabbits to play with, “’an’ live on the fatta the lan’”. Lennie always asks George to tell him how it will be one day. Lennie wants to hear about the time when they will leave the farm where they work and buy their own farm. That will be the day when they can be independent and live their American dream. George says that they will have strawberries and rabbits and their own little house to live in without rules or restrictions. George's and Lennie's dream is so appealing that Candy and Crooks want to join George's and Lennie's dream of owning their own farm because they think that George and Lennie are close to reaching that dream. George's and Lennie's dream appeals to Candy and Crooks because it is everything that they also want to have and have never achieved. However, perhaps this dream only appeals to them because they see it as something that will be reached soon. Candy and Crooks want to be able to live out the American dream even if it is someone else's. I believe that George and Lennie would have achieved their American dream if Lennie had not been killed. Later on, Lennie thought of more appealing things for their dream, he thought about building a little house, like his grandpa’s old house, “I could build a small house like the one gran’pa had”. Also he adds about having pidgeons, and letting them fly around, “ An’ we’d keep a few pigeons to go flyin’ around the win’mill like they done when I was a…
People live their lives with dreams in mind throughout everything they do, turning those dreams into goals that many do not ever succeed at. In John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, it is shown that dreams have the power to rule a person's life, through Lennie relying on George on the idea of their dream, and George and Lennie only working in hopes to fulfill their dreams.…
Lennie who has learning difficulties has problems speaking, and so when talking normally he frequently stutters, with pauses in his speech, “I...I ain’t gonna say nothing”. In addition to this Lennie rarely speaks on his own shown by his encounter with Curley’s wife in which he speaks sparsely and almost only talks about George and the rabbits, “he ain’t gonna let me tend the rabbits”, “I can’t tend no rabbits”. Both of these nuances in Lennie’s speech suggest that his American Dream, having their own farm, is an idealistic, perfect world. This is implied because when speaking about the American Dream the stuttering and pauses in Lennie’s speech disappear. “Tell me how it’s gonna be”, “Now tell how it is with us”. Consequently the American Dream is perceived as a place where Lennie is not different and is as able as any other man. Moreover Lennie speaks predominantly about the American Dream due to not being confused about it. Society has condemned Lennie to be a social outcast due to his disabilities and therefore he struggles to speak about current events in case he says something wrong and is duly punished by George. However in the American Dream there is nothing to be mistaken about as everything is…
Was the American Dream really designed for everyone? The American Dream was known as something everyone aspired to. In the novel Of Mice and Men, author John Steinbeck sets the book in California, near the Soledad River. Steinbeck uses several characters as a way to spark different perspectives in the novel.…
Thesis: The novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck and the play A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry show that there is great struggle in reaching The American Dream.…