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Discrimination In Of Mice And Men By John Steinbeck

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Harsh reality
In a room right off the side of a barn sits a crippled colored man. A big, kind, mentally disabled man sits on a nail keg. An old, one-armed man leans against one of the walls. A lonely wife looking for company stands in the middle of the doorway. They are the outsiders and prime examples for a theme that is the backbone of the story. Discrimination not only affects the story’s characters, but it also impacts the story itself. Discrimination greatly affects the outcome of the story and its characters’ actions and thoughts in Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. Although each character faces discrimination in various ways, Lennie, Candy, Crooks, and Curley’s wife are all viewed as outsiders and share the common key theme of discrimination in their lives.
In the beginning of the story you see the theme, discrimination, already making an impact on the story through the character Lennie Smalls. He is introduced as a huge, friendly man who is not bright. Being discriminated against is lonely, but not if you have something to comfort yourself. This is what Lennie did, he found comfort in soft things. However, this comfort, to combat being discriminated, brings his demise at the end of the book. George pinpoints one of the reasons why Lennie is discriminated, when he says, “If he finds out what a crazy bastard you are, we won’t get no job, but if he sees ya work before he hears ya talk we’re set. Ya got that?”(Steinbeck 6). During the Great Depression, mentally

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