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Dirty Thirties In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

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The so-called “Dirty Thirties” was the time period for John Steinbeck’s seventh novel, Of Mice and Men. Of Mice and Men is about two migrant workers, Lennie Small and George Milton, who arrive at a farm. Lennie is mentally disabled, and he is pushed into a mass of conflicts both by his own conduct and others conduct. Included in Steinbeck’s novel are five communities: the mentally disabled (i.e. Lennie), the physically disabled (i.e. Candy and Crooks), people of color (i.e. Crooks), women (i.e. Curley’s wife), and migrant farmers (i.e. Slim). The communities were all influenced by current events going on (in California) that Steinbeck saw, and took action. John Steinbeck clearly discusses and incorporates five cultural and/or minority groups …show more content…

Even though Of Mice and Men takes place after the long fight of women to gain suffrage, women had less rights than men in the book (women gained suffrage approximately 17 years prior to the story’s events). This basic lack of rights is demonstrated by the fact that Steinbeck names Curley’s wife as he does. In the patriarchal society of the United States, the belief that women were property, not people was prevalent and commonplace. The suffrage movement, which led to all of the above, took place from 1848 to 1920, and was especially promoted during the outbreak of World War 1, when women were able to support the home and work in factories. These are all reasons and analysis for why Steinbeck chose to use this ‘major’ minority group in one of his most famous …show more content…

A variety of characters are introduced, many of which resemble a stereotypical community, often minority, of which the world at large misunderstands or mistreat. Included as minority characters and communities are: the intellectually disabled (Lennie), the physically disabled (Candy and Crooks), people of color (Crooks), women (Curley’s wife), and migrant workers (i.e. George, Lennie, Slim). These five communities were minorities in the world, and Steinbeck took the ideals, treatments, and actions of/towards people in each category and meshed them together to create this novel. When taken as a whole, the novel is about the struggles of people living in the 1930’s (especially people in the aforementioned communities) and the societal reaction to them. Steinbeck weaves a thread of the disabled through the cloth of the “normal” people. Broken down, each community has its struggles documented and the reactions recorded to make a dark novel with darker implications (mostly about life in the 20th

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