mice and men

Cards (20)

  • 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 symbolizes capitalism 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