At the beginning of the novel the pair are optimistic for the future and consistently dream of living of the "fatta the lan'"
Worst of the Great
Depression
Food shortages and
high unemployment
Anotações:
"There was then no dole to fall back on, so food was short and the unemployed in cities couldn't pay their rent. Some ended up in settlements called 'Hoovervilles' (after the US president of the time, Herbert C Hoover), in shanties made from old packing cases and corrugated iron."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/english_literature/prosemicemen/0prose_mice_men_contrev2.shtml
Droughts in the Mid-West
Failed harvests and dried
up land in Oklahoma and
Texas
Characters
Slim
Wise 'old' man
experinced on the
ranch
experinced
Knowladge
understands his
sorroundings
Curley's Wife
Only female character
Only ever referred to in relation
to her husband, shows a lack of
identity
Seen as property
Womens rights at the
time was still a grey
area
She is viewed as being
manipulative and dangerous
"jailbait"
"tart"
"Rouged Lips" "Red Mules"
RED
Colour Theory suggests
Passion, Danger,
Incongruity
Anotações:
Incongruous: not in harmony or keeping with the surroundings or other aspects of something
https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=incongruous&oq=incongruous&aqs=chrome..69i57&sourceid=chrome&es_sm=122&ie=UTF-8
Her development shows
her to be insecure and
lonely
Crooks
stable buck
victim of discrimination
and ostracization
Lives away from the
rest of the group
Kick by a horse
hunch
backed as a
result
Has lowest
social and
economic class
on the ranch
'Crooks' is a nickname
Like curleys wife he is not
named and so si denied an
identity and voice
Most of the ranch
workers refer to him
in derogatory, racist
tems
Racism in america is a
major problem
Black people had little to no rights
He is proud, dignified man
who is well-read and
completely aware of his legal
rights
He is cynical of the world
and suspicious of people
Boss
Highest status
owns ranch
only seen in one instance
Candy
Elderly
Represents the
elderly as a
forgotten
generation
Honest
loyalty
Has / Had a dog
'Put down', arguably
murdered, by Clarson
Foreshadows Candy's future on
the ranch as someone who has
outlived their use
Injury is an inevitable
by-product of a life of
physical labour
Ostracised because of
his disability and age
Possibly and
older George?
Entirely devoted to the dream
reflecting his naivety
An escape
MAIN
Lennie
Big
Physically very strong
which contrasts with his
childlike emotions
Surname
'Small' An
ironic
reference
to his size.
Slow
Mentally &
physiclly
Speech
often
mumbled
Disabled
Innocent?
Child like
Short for Leonard, from
Lewenhart (Old High Gernan)
meaning as strong as a lion
Central to the tragedy of the novella, he is doomed from the start; his
actions foreshadow and direct the narrative
Described in animalistic terms
to emphasise his simple,
instinctual nature
The innocence of his
dream is undermined
by his disability,
suggesting that it is
not a reasonable view
of the world
George
Small
intelligent
The "brains" of
the pair
Responsible for lennie
father figure
Short-tempered
but honest,
conscientious
and loyal
Protective of
Lennie which
may be the
source of his curt
nature
He is perhaps
bound to
lennie from
guilt of his
teasing when
younger
From Georgos (Greek)
meaning 'earth worker'
Milton (sur
name) is
possibly a link
to John Milton
and 'Paradise
Lost'
Anotações:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradise_Lost
He has simple
pleasures and
is an idealist as
shown in his
dream of
self-sufficiency
Refers to American Dream
Killing Lennie is an act
of mercy and
self-sacrifice as it
reders the dream as
unobtainable
Themes
Relationships
Migrant workers struggle to
maintain permanent
relationships
George and Lennie are strengthened by their friendship
Mutually beneficial
Contrasted by Curley and his Wife.
Loveless marrige
Loneliness / Isolation
All characters are isolated in some way
Even George and Lennie
Some characters feel lonely
Whit
Candy
Curley's Wife
Crooks insists on being alone,
although it is clear he does not like
it
It's safer for him
Characters struggle to express themselves:
Curley is aggressive
Carlson lacks empathy
Dreams / aspirations
Most characters dream for a better life
George, Lennie and
candy long to be
self-sufficient: The
American Dream
Crooks is cynical about
dreams due years of
discrimination
Title: Of Mice and Men
Allusion to a Robert Burns
poem 'To a mouse, on turning
up in her nest with the plough'
"The best-laid schemes o' mice an 'men
Gang aft agley, "
The best laid plans of mice and men
Often go awry,
Anotações:
Awry
away from the usual or expected course; amiss.
https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=awry&oq=awry&aqs=chrome..69i57&sourceid=chrome&es_sm=122&ie=UTF-8
Don't make plans, they will always fail
Emphasises the fatalistic tone of the novella
Life is harsh and
dreams are fragile
Style and technique
Technique
Structure
Episodic
clear & simple
Writen in 3rd person
narrative with a variety of
narrative perspective
Starts and ends in the brush
with George and Lennie running
away
Structure is cyclical
No escape
History repeats itself, showing
that the characters are caught
in a vicious circle
George has to break the
cycle by killing lennie
Language
Language is simple and direct
High proportion of dialogue
Dialogue uses slang and dialect
Language reflects the characters, time
and place
Stienbeck gives a voice to the
ignored strata of society