Even by working hard, people don’t always get what they want. In the book Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, Lennie and George are two friends who are traveling to find a job, so they can finally earn money and live their dream life. They find the farm, and they had a hard path in the future to get their dream. Whether they will reach it is the real question. John Steinbeck developed the impossibility of the American dream in the 1930s by showing that people worked hard for their dreams, if they can’t physically do work they aren’t interesting to people, and people following their dreams become selfish.
People worked very hard to achieve their dreams, that’s my first reason. The point here is that so many people worked hard to achieve their goals and their conditionals weren’t the best but they still worked through them it shows how hard was it to achieve their American dream during the 1930s. This quote is very good proof of my point “God damn near four miles that’s what it was.” (Steinbeck 5). This quote shows that doesn’t matter what conditions people had, they
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The point here is that during the 1930s people worked a lot and they would get paid for their work, but when people are not useful anymore no one cares about what is going to happen to them. This quote shows the example of how the old dog is being treated when he is useless. “God almighty that dog stinks. Get him outta here, Candy. I don’t know nothing that stinks as bad as an old dog. You gotta get him out.” (Steinbeck 74). The quote connects to the point because this old dog represented a person who can’t physically do anything anymore, so people lose their interest in this person like they lost to the dog and told Candy to get him out of the room. When they also said that the dog is useless Candy took it personally. This shows that during this time people counted the time they didn’t have time for useless things or
How does Steinbeck show the failing dreams of all the main characters, and how easy their goals are shattered throughout the book? Throughout the book, Of Mice and Men, George and Lennie, two labor workers that are run out of their previous employment in Weed, find a ranch to work on in Salinas Valley California to fulfill their dreams of being rich and having their own farm. Salinas Valley is where they plan to stay until they have saved enough money to have their own ranch and move on. Besides the dreams George and Lennie have, many other people on the ranch have ones as well. While Steinbeck illustrates the journey the characters go through to achieve their dreams, their failed attempt occurs for numerous reasons.
Some people think that the dog was better off dead, “'Why’n’t you get Candy to shoot his old dog and give him one of the pups to raise up? I can smell that dog a mile away. Got no teeth, damn near blind, can’t eat'" (Steinbeck 18). Readers often refer to this quote to assume that the dog was suffering and should be killed off for its own good. Many people perceived the situation differently because it is a dog not a child, not a woman, not a man.
A decision's effects can be profound. Selfishness is frequently associated with decision-making, but is it really selfish if it's for the greater good? This question is incorporated into John Steinbeck's novella, Of Mice Men, in which George had to make a pivotal decision for the better. Throughout the novella, George is responsible for Lennie, who is mentally handicapped. Due to his mental impairment, Lennie lacks self-awareness in his strength and is unable to refrain from harming people and the animals he cares for.
Candy's dog eventually gets shot for no reason, other than the fact that the others do not like him. The dog was hated by the other men living on the farm. The sense of feeling that others do not like you is one of the main contributes to lonliness in the world today. Steinbeck attempts to allow readers to recognize this, and change their actions and words towards others to prevent this lonely state in
Jamison Seese Mr. Kelley English 9 February 9, 2023 Hopes and Dreams Do people's hopes and dreams, even those that may never come true help them to survive? The story of Of Mice and Men is about two friends in the 1930s, Lennie and George. They are migrant workers who have a dream like every other worker, they want to be independent. They want to live on their own farm and finally be in control.
” I’ve learned that it is not what I have in my life but who I have in my life that counts. ”(http://www.searchquotes.com/quotation/I%27ve_learned_that%2C_it_is_not_what_I_have_in_my_life_but_who_I_have_in_my_life_that_counts./447970/) .What this quote means is that friends are someone that are worth more then anything else. In John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men,he shows how the men in farms are always lonely. For example, Crooks did not have anyone.
How Steinbeck foreshadows the unattainable dream for Lennie and George: In “Of Mice and Men”, Steinbeck explores the idea of the American Dream throughout the novel. The American Dream was the era in which many people, of different backgrounds, moved to America in the hopes of finding a better life. This time period lasted until the late 1920s. America had large amounts of fertile soil which offered many opportunities for becoming rich, as owning your own plot of land meant that you could make your own income and have a high financial status.
Humanity and reason is a necessity in a sane society, and racism is furthest from humane. Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck is all about humanity and integrity. There are many examples of the book including racial prejudice, but also having morals of compassion, and companionship. Of Mice and Men also includes the feeling of loneliness and chasing your dreams. An overall argument John Steinbeck is trying to make in Of Mice and Men is that racism is not humane.
Of Mice and Men One time, standing in my cabin, I glanced outside to see the grazing horses and the jumping rabbits. I felt light, yet remorse, because rabbits are a symbol in the book Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. Rabbits were the fixation Lennie had and hope he held on to for a better future. John Steinbeck gives a hopeful, sorrowful tone throughout the whole book Of Mice and Men (1937). In the book, George and Lennie bounce around from job to job, never having a solid place to call home.
”(Steinbeck 81). Candy is powerless to even stop a woman, who is also a paran marginalized group and is seen as even weaker than men, This goes to show that even though Candy’s wiser and a man he's still seen as weak with little to no power. “Candy looked for help from face to face.” (Steinbeck 45). When looking back at the first quote we can see the level of power Candy has and what that means to him, Candy is constantly shot down by Carlson when it comes down to the whereabouts of his dog, Candy doesn’t have enough power to tell Carlson anyone, instead, he looks for help from
Everyone aspires to achieve the American Dream: an opportunity to be successful by working hard. Throughout the novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, the American Dream brings hope for a better life for those who hold onto it. George Milton and Lennie Smalls, traveling ranch workers called bindle stiffs, dream of owning their own piece of land where they create the rules. They are not the only characters with hopes and dreams. But Steinbeck shows the American Dream is, in fact, sometimes just a dream through the hopes and actions of Lennie, Candy, and Curley’s wife.
In John Steinbeck's novel Of Mice and Men, George and Lennie’s dream was to own a farm. They wanted a place of their own, and to be secure and independent. This dream represented a chance at a better life and relief from their hard-scrabble existence. As they had each other to rely on, it was also symbolic of friendship. Through their friendship, Lennie and George demonstrated how to work towards their dreams despite adversity in the 1930s.
In Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, two friends, George, a smart but feisty man, and Lennie, a large, mentally unstable man, start working at a ranch. One of the workers on the ranch, Candy, is an old man in the end stages of his life. Due to the his low productivity, the other ranch workers look down upon him. Steinbeck argues that the purpose of Candy’s disability, his old age, is to signify that being old and not helping society eliminates the chances
Candy and his dog are both old, handicapped, and essentially useless on the ranch. Candy lost his right hand in an accident, and his dog is nearly blind. Candy's only job on the ranch is to "swamp" out the bunkhouse, because he is considered too old to engage in hard labor. Similarly, Candy's dog serves no purpose on the farm and wanders aimlessly around the ranch. Candy and his dog represent what happens to everyone in the economically depressed country once they become too old to work and provide for themselves.
‘’ That god damn old he can't hardly walk stinks like hell to ever time he comes into the book house i can smell him for two there days ‘’ (Steinbeck 36)`The novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck is about two guys that are trying to find a job and once they get that job they are saving it to get like a barn and land. One of the characters is Carlson; he shoots Candy’s dog because he was smelling stinky. Shooting Candy’s dog was good because he was old and I don't think Candy was taking care of it. For example, “cause he stinks and he is very old so to me it doesn't matter an he can hardly walk so to me a dog doesn't even supposed to be in the house (P. 36 ) This quote shows if he was taking care of his dog this would have