The novella of mice and men by john steinbeck takes place over four days starting on thursday evening and ending on sunday
George and Lenny discuss their dream of owning their own ranch and working for themselves, but this is shown to be an impossibility
Lenny accidentally kills Curly's wife, and George's only option is to shoot Lenny before he's caught
George
A husbandman, a person who cultivates the land, associated with commitment and brotherly love towards Lenny
Lenny
A figure with childlike innocence but immense physical strength, based on a real person Steinbeck had met, symbolizing humankind's animal nature and inevitable doom
Slim
The mule driver, a permanent employee who represents fairness, sound judgment, and the conscience of the novel
Lenny
Carries his own destiny
Represents the mouse in his own pocket
Slim
Mule driver and permanent employee of the ranch
Epitomizes fairness, sound judgment and dignified acceptance
Respected on the ranch by peers and superiors
Accepts and sanctions George and Lenny within the bunkhouse community
Depicted as the conscience of the novel and the voice of truth
Understands that George probably killed Lenny to protect him
Curly
The boss's son
Depicted as a very hyper masculine symbol of the angry young generation of the 1930s
Insecure and has a grudge against bigger, taller men
Ostracized from the ranch community as he represents white collar power
Rendered a laughingstock because of the actions of his own flirtatious wife
Has an inability to create a meaningful relationship with his wife
Curly's Wife
The only woman on the ranch
Marries Curly not due to love but due to limited choices as a woman in 1930s America
Filled with adolescent rage at missing out on a Hollywood career
Nameless, an ironic indicator that she will never be famous
Presented consistently as a sexual commodity
Her overt sexuality is an inversion of George's puritanical nature
Starved of companionship and acceptance, an outsider
Fulfills the role of Eve in the Genesis story, a temptress and femme fatale
Crooks
The only African-American man on the ranch
Partially disabled, called Crooks because his back is crooked and bent
Carries a double burden of being black and disabled
Conditioned by an environment of brokenness, cynicism, disillusionment and low self-esteem
Occupies the lowest status on the ranch house community
Responds to his treatment with intellectualized fortitude and resilience
Symbolic objects in his place characterize his world of brokenness
Candy
A disabled swamper, used as a scapegoat for the brutality of the ranch house community
A sentimentalised figure, the object of reader sympathy
Offers George his life savings to try and attain the American dream
Inescapably linked to his uselessness with his old dog
Portrayed as helpless, maltreated and ultimately cast aside
Carlson
Embodies the detached migrant worker
Pressurizes Candy into having his dog shot
Carries out the killing with evident capability
Has no problem with destruction and unintentional cruelty
Owns the luger pistol that George later uses to kill Lenny
Represents the force of destruction that's key to modern capitalist USA
American Dream
The idea that America would give up opportunities denied to people in their home countries
Some people who migrated to America did strike it rich, but many more lost their lives and savings in this futile quest
Represented by the ranch that George and Lenny want to have, a coalition that symbolizescapitalism in its purest form
Desire for work for themselves, material wealth, spiritual fulfillment, profit and independence
The Californian coastal valley where the action takes place is a small, confined, primitive place that is a dream farm and a recited Garden of Eden
Even before the story begins, the description of the valley suggests that paradise might already be spoiled
George's relationship with Lenny
George is a radical leader attempting to lead Lenny, a symbol of the masses, to a utopia of owning a farm, but Lenny's destructiveness causes the utopia to fail
George is simply a worker trying to improve his lot in life by becoming a landowner, but this ambition collapses
From a psychoanalytical perspective, Lenny is George's shadow self, a scapegoat for his own faults
Survival of the Fittest
Steinbeck's principal aim is to show that without the civilizing forces of companionship, we become almost like animals feeding off others and spurning the weak
Exemplified in the way characters represent varying forms of prejudice - physical disability, gender, racial, mental disability, social class
The story shows the power for society formed by nature's lower forces and the power that this has to destroy finer human aspiration
Lenny
A large, simple-minded and clumsy character, his physical appearance is most like an animal
His fawning approach to Crooks is like a shy dog wanting to make friends
At the end, when George kills him, he is identified with Candy's old dog
Curly and Carlson
Display the baser elements of nature, lacking sensitivity for the helpless and weaker
Curly is driven to constantly compete, epitomizing man's lower nature
Carlson pressurizes Candy into allowing him to shoot his dog, showing his animalistic nature
George and Lenny
Embody the finest spirit that aspires and sustains human connections
Lenny's obsession with mice and rabbits represents his yearning for human warmth
George and Lenny have a human bond that could be classified as being in the spirit of the family
They travel together, have a history, responsibility and commitment to each other
Candy hopes to become part of George and Lenny's family, and their rise above animal nature is consistent with their rise above mere self-gratification and concern for the shared future rather than animalistic survival from one day to the next