“The Depression brought a massive influx of hopeful refugees to California from elsewhere in the United States, including 300,000 new agricultural workers–the people of John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath. These newcomers worked in the fields and stores for fifteen cents an hour while Hollywood made movies about their lot, Woody Guthrie sang songs about them, and union organizers tried hard to make a labor-based revolution. The fortunes of these ‘Okies’ is just one of the sweeping topics that Starr, a fine writer and imaginative chronicler, takes on in this book.”(Starr 1).
Lennie is constantly recognized as having a dream of “livin off tha fatta tha lan” (Steinbeck 14).
Joesph Fonenrose states concisely that “The central image is the earthly paradise……It is a vision of Eden. (Fontenrose 372).
Peter Lisca takes this perception further, nothing that”the world of Of Mice ans men is a fallen one, inhabited by sons of Cain, forever exiled from Eden the little farm of which they dream” (Lisca 368).
There are no Edens in Steinbecks writing, only illusions of Eden, and in the wicked world of the Salinas valley the Promised land is an illusory and painful dream. Donald Pizer calls the predominant theme of the theme of loneliness, because the worldis populated with sons of Cain that are condemed to wander in solitude,” the fear of apartness” (Pizer 54).
In fact one of the major themes of the book is the fear of loneliness. The dream of George and Lennie represents a desire to defy the curse of Cain and the fallen man, this is done to counter the theme of Pizer by breaking the pattern of wandering and loneliness imposed by the outcasts and return to their perfect garden. The dream of the farm symbolizes their deep mutual commitment, a commitment that instantly is noticed by the other characters in the book. For if only a moment the mutual commitment of George and Lennie has made the other characters their brothers keeper and broke the grips of loneliness and solitude in the world they are apart of. The selection of the setting is perfect with the city of Los Angeles being the city of dreams, its close proximity to the Salinas river and the town of Soledad makes it evident that Steinbeck intentionally placed the novel here.
The Essay on The theme of loneliness in ‘Of mice & men’
“Of Mice and Men” is a skillful novel, which deals with the theme of `outsiders’, that is, individuals who do not fit into the mainstream of society. The novel portrays this idea of loneliness throughout John Steinbeck’s stimulating and exciting novel. There are several clearly identified themes running through the novel. The loyalty and friendship which exists between two ...
With Soledad meaning solitude or loneliness in English, the state of the characters was taken into consideration with the setting. This is the state where most people travel to in order to pursue their dreams and most times leave solitary and unfulfilled aspirations. There is a sharp contrast made between George and Lennie, and then other characters because they have each other. At one point in the story George comments that “We got somebody to talk to that gives a damn about us” (Steinbeck 120).
the migration of thousands of jobless and dispossessed Americans from the Dust Bowl states to the so-called promised land of California evokes the hardships and despair of the Great Depression. Lennie, constantly getting into trouble, inadvertently causes the two of them to be run out of town and thus have to find new work regularly. George and Lennie’s search for work in the hope of accomplishing their dream of a small farm of their own displays how futile realizing dreams can be. ‘The never-quite-realized, too often shattered dreams of men toward an ideal future of security, tranquility, ease, and contentment runs like a Greek choral chant throughout the novel and the play, infecting, enlivening, and ennobling not only George and Lennie, but the crippled, broken down ranch hand, Candy, and the twisted back Negro stable buck, Crooks, who begs to come in on the plan George has to buy a little farm'(Rascoe 337).
Crooks says, ‘Nobody never gets to heaven and nobody gets no land.
The Essay on George And Lennie Crooks Steinbeck Extract
An Extract Demonstrating Steinbeck's Style In Of An Extract Demonstrating Steinbeck's Style In Of Mice And Men The extract I have chosen is from the beginning of chapter four and stretches from page 71 to page 73. This extract gives a detailed description of Crooks, his room and his possessions. The entrance of Lennie into Crooks room and the development of their relationship throughout the scene ...
It’s just in their head. They’re all the time talking about it, but it’s jus’ in their head'(Steinbeck 74).
Lisca proposes, ‘It is while Lennie is caught up in this dream vision that George shoots him, so that on one level the vision is accomplished — the dream never interrupted, the rabbits never crushed'(Lisca 343).
After the accidental death of Curley’s wife, George cancels the partnership with Candy that could have made the dream a reality, because George needed Lennie as a rationalization for his failure (Lisca 345).
‘The dream of the farm originates with Lennie; and it is only through Lennie, who also makes it impossible, that the dream has any meaning for George'(Lisca 345).
The plan has no meaning for George without Lennie (Fontenrose 351).
‘Steinbeck said that Lennie represents ‘the inarticulate and powerful yearning of all men,’ and referred to its scene as a microcosm, making it plain that this novel was meant to express the inevitable defeat and futility of all men’s plans.’ (Steinbeck 45).
Fontenrose concludes, ‘A dream of independence, usually remains a dream; and when it becomes a real plan, the plan is defeated'(Fontenrose 350).
Fontenrose, Joseph. in his John Steinbeck: An Introduction and Interpretation, Barnes & Noble, Inc., 1963, p.
150, in Contemporary Literary Criticism Vol. 75, edited by Thomas Votteler, Detroit: Gale Research Inc., 1993, p. 350-351. Lisca, Peter. ‘Motif and Pattern in ‘Of Mice and Men’,’ in Modern Fiction Studies, Vol. II, No. 4, Winter, 1956-57, pp. 228-34, in Contemporary Literary Criticism Vol.
75, edited by Thomas Votteler, Detroit: Gale Research Inc., 1993, pp. 342-345. Rascoe, Burton. ‘John Steinbeck,’ in Steinbeck and His Critics: A Record of Twenty-Five Years, edited by E. W. Tedlock, Jr. and C.
V. Wicker, University of New Mexico Press, 1957, pp. 57-67, in Contemporary Literary Criticism Vol. 75, edited by Thomas Votteler, Detroit: Gale Research Inc., 1993, pp. 336-339. Steinbeck, John. Of Mice and Men.
New York: Penguin Books, 1993..