Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Of Mice and Men
- Themes
- American Dream
- Lonliness
- Compansionship
- Racism and sexism
- Characters
- George
- Lennie
- Workers
- Slim
- Leading worker in the bunk house
- Masculine
- Strong
- Slim gives Lennie a puppy
- Comforts George for killing Lennie
- Intelligant
- Understanding
- Agrees that candys dog should be killed
- Respected
- Listened too
- Power
- Importance
- Candy
- Lost his right arm
- Reduced to worst job, 'Swamper'
- Finds Curleys Wifes dead
body
- Age and physical weakness emphasied
- Strong Statement of the novel:
such people are worthy of our
respect
- Warns George and Lennie
about Curley
- Friendship
- Offers $300 to help by the
farm (dream)
- Caring
- Had a hard life
- Allows Carlson to shoot
his old dog
- Relationship with dog like
George's relationship with
Lennie
- Symbolises the idea that once you
become old and can't work your
just seen as surplus population and
not wanted (on a ranch)
- Crooks
- Stable Buck
- Lives in stable
- Isolated
- Sympathise with him
- 'Busted' Spine
- Disability
- Lives with constant pain
- Curleys with has power
over him: Get him
lynched if she cries rape
- Doesnt want to be involved
in the dream
- Victim of racial prejudice
- Proud, Independent
and Intelligant
- Curleys Wife
- Plot
- Section 1
- George and Lennie have
walked a long way, towards
the ranch and stop at the
Salinas River
- They had to leave their
previous job because
Lennie touched a girls
dress
- We learn that Lennie is
slow understanding: where
he is petting a dead mouse