Most people probably know someone with a mental disability. Just because someone has a disability does not mean we have to ignore, or neglect them. People with a mental disability are not to be shunned. The statement by J.F. Clarke proves true when using psychological lens to analyze conflict and characterization in the novella Of Mice and Men, by John Stienbeck by Stienbeck's use of conflict throughout the novella. First, the author uses characterization to deepen the meaning of the novella. The author tells the reader that is not very smart and has a mental disability. "He's awright. Just ain't bright. But he can do anything you tell him" (22). George tells people about Lenny's disability. He wants Lenny to get a job so they can get payed and live. George obviously thinks highly of Lenny. George takes care of Lenny even in the Great Depression when George can barely take care of his self. "O.K. Someday-we're gonna get the jack together and we're gonna have a little house and a coup,e of acres an' a cow and some pigs and- " (14). George and Lenny talk about what they are looking for in the future. …show more content…
Lenny often has conflicts with others. This is part of his mental illness. He always depicts the good in people and that tends to circle back to him without his . "Course he ain't mean. But he gets into trouble from time to time" (41). Lenny gets into trouble because he does not know any different. Lenny always sees the good in people and that can hurt him because people take advantage of him. George chooses to stay with Lenny even with his disability. "God almighty, if I was alone I could live so easy" (11). George explains to the reader that he would be much better off Lenny. George does not please Lenny even though he does not have to care for Lenny. I think that George feels it is the right thing to do. The conflicts the characters encounter shape who they
There is only one way an author can get their readers to cry, laugh, and love or just enjoy their master pieces. That one way is through the uses of literary devices such as similes, metaphors and personification. These are the small things that brings the author`s thoughts and ideas alive. The author`s ability to use literary devices through the book helps in direct characterization and lets readers get a better understanding of Lennie and George, the two main characters Of Mice and Men. It also helps in keeping readers thinking on their feet and constantly questioning George and Lennie`s next move while in Salinas, California. John Steinbeck, in his novel Of Mice and Men, makes use of similes and foreshadowing to keep readers in touch
“Look, George. Look what I done” (Steinbeck, Pg. 3). Here Steinbeck gives us the idea that Lennie looks up to George in everything he does like a child does to his parents. Lennie can’t take of himself since he is mentally handicapped so we get an idea that even though they are just friends, George is like a father figure to Lennie. Also by the word choice in the dialogue we can see that Lennie communicates in a particular way like if he just learn to speak, therefore he could be compared as a child. “I wasn’t doin’ nothing bad with it, George. Jus’ strokin’ it.” Steinbeck uses dialogue to give us an idea of George’s strong personality. “Don’t let him pull you in-but- if the son of a bitch” This quote gives us the idea that George’s personality is very strong and defensive by the explicit language which shows us anger. Also it gives us a idea that even though he is strong and aggressive he cares about what happens to Lennie. This can relate to the link that he treats him like he is his
In life human nature can be known to be thought of as a high quality and/or low quality. Naturally, human nature is there without thought about what it actually is. In the novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, the author sprinkles clues and evidence of how human nature was and still is today. The themes that Steinbeck used throughout the novel were, for example friendship, loneliness, and weak vs. strong.
Lenny Small is one of the main characters. Lenny is born with a mental disability. The mental disability often causes him to have childish tendencies therefore his best friend George has to take care of him. Lenny’s last name is Small’s. He is not. Lenny is a big, strong a childlike. He often thinks about living on a small farm, tending to colorful rabbits, hearing bedtime stories and to touching soft things. This causes problems because due to impairment Lenny is unaware of his own strength. Throughout the novel Lenny’s obliviousness to his own strength creates various quandaries. In the beginning of the novel Lenny’s is accused of rape for holding onto a girls dress
George kills his best and only friend. In the story Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck Lennie accidentally kills curley's wife, because she is screaming when Lennie touches her hair, he tries to stop her from screaming and ends up suffocating her. Then he runs to the place he is supposed to go if he does something bad. After that George and Candy finds Curley’s wife dead. They know Lennie killed her, George tells Candy to tell everyone what they found when George goes to Lennie. At the moment people are looking for him. George talks to Lennie and makes a hard decision and decided to shoot him. The event of George killing Lennie is the big decision which needed some motivation from inward and outward influences, also it has quite the impact to the story.
In the famous novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck there are two amazing characters, George Milton and Lennie Small. George and Lennie are the main characters in this novel and have a very strong connection. Lennie Small is mentally disabled, and is also really strong, but he does not yet know that he is strong. George is a very smart, yet an uneducated man, but unlike Lennie he is very weak. George needs Lennie as much as Lennie needs George. Lennie tells George, “I got you to look after me, and you got me to look after you, and that's why” (1.115-116).
Someone who disagrees with George being a realistic character might say that it is highly unlikely for someone, in the time period the book takes place, would use their whole, promising, life to take care of someone with a mental disability. People with mental disabilities were treated very badly during the setting. The unknown of these disabilities scared people, so they sent the disabled to institutets to live out their life secluded from the outside world. Unfortunately, Lenny is one of the people to possess a disability, but his situation is a little different than being set into mental institutes. He is taken care of by George and travels around working alongside George, dreaming of tending the rabbits. Although Lenny’s situation is unlike most others, because of his disability, it would have made it almost impossible for him to have the chance to travel around working with George. This argument is incorrect because although it might be unlikely, it is very possible that there were people in the same situation as George, having to take care of someone with a disability. It might have been a rough time period, but there were good people in the world and i'm sure there were people with the intelligence level of Geroge, and also the level of compassion he possesses. In different places around the book, George
The book Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck is the tale of two men, George and Lennie, who are friends and laborers in the fields of California. They are recovering from the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl and struggling to find work and money. George is small and smart; quite the opposite of Lennie, who is large in size and infantile in his thoughts. Lennie, once left alone by his late Aunt Clara,has been under George’s care since. He looks up to George, acting as a forgetful, but obedient child; always trying to please George and never wanting to upset him.
Approximately 1 in 25 adults in the U.S. experiences s serious mental illness that affects their daily health according to NAMI. It is also shown that 1 in 5 Canadians will experience a mental illness in their lifetime. This was the case for Lennie in Of Mice and Men, he was one of the statistics that had dealt with the barrier of mental health. In this essay, you will gain insight on how mental health affects citizens in the two North American countries as well as the hardships the main charters in the novel Of Mice and Men had to deal with. It will mainly focus on the hardships that come with having a mental disability such as, unfair treatment in the workplace, being discriminated against by others in your community as well as the barrier that is set when someone with a metal disability doesn’t get the help they need.
George is a character of a strong guy who have to take care of his friend, Lennie. George is a tough and efficient person as described in the book as “small and quick, dark of face, with restless eyes” (Steinbeck, 1994). To most people he is viewed as an experienced or even a wise person. His intelligence and quick response might be partly from his duty to take care of Lennie. There were many scenes in which George warns Lennie not to do this and that, since he could predict what is coming of Lennie’s action. The theme for George are friendship, dream, freedom and sacrifice. George transformed from having Lennie by his side to getting the freedom he always wanted. He plays a significant role in unfolding the story; the story will not be possible without him.
The opuscule, “Of Mice and Men”, written by John Steinbeck, depicts the life of a lower-class laborer during the Great Depression through the relationship of rancher duo George Milton and Lennie Small. (Insert Mini Summary essentials) George stays with Lennie because he feels obligated to and because he needs Lennie’s companionship in what feels like a lonely world. By showing readers the value and purity in George and Lennie’s strained relationship, Steinbeck communicates the importance and value of camaraderie.
George additionally uses Lennie as an excuse for the inferior deprivation that he must endure. He frequently claims that life would be "so easy" for him were it not for the stress of caring for Lennie. This is perceived as an assertion of ambitious logic. But most of all, George needs Lennie to coexist with and to prop up his "aspiration" of owning a little farm and thereby conserve it from dissipating under the brutal exertion of reality. It is based upon the complex relationship. It’s not brotherly love, which brings the two together. The theme of friendship seems to be characterized by a overpowering, primal reclusiveness that runs directly through the lives of all of the characters in Of Mice and Men, and it is this discrete that compose the novella's preponderate motif. George and Lennie are two individual beings who can be described as purposeless and,put in a situation at undercarriage, on their own in the universe that Steinbeck illustrated. In John Steinbeck’s novella, Of Mice And Men, Steinbeck justified what a great and loyal friendship should be throughout the book many times. A friendship is characterized as relationship where a person shouldn’t rely on the other too much, and not get anything back, but instead counter-balance each other out. Seemingly complex, because of its uniqueness, George and Lennie actually share a quite straightforward relationship. Leading the lonesome reality of agricultural workers, they both just crave for the love, nourishment, and camaraderie. Even though they communicate and live as brothers would, Lennie is more of a babysitting gig to George. Hopeless for enlightenment, he is essentially kept alive by George. He turns to George in aid of work, shelter, food, and a long-lasting bond . But in a turn of events, George is the same man who sat there and ‘fathered’ Lennie through life ultimately shot and killed Lennie. But it was only through sympathy. Even
In the novella “Of Mice and Men,” the author John Steinbeck portrays the main idea of how difficult circumstances could potentially cause you to make painful choices for those who you love. During this time, the Great Depression was occurring in America and it was a time where many common people felt an immense amount of humiliation due to poverty, a lack of food and homelessness. John Steinbeck utilizes characterization in the novel, to show that your choices throughout life are an effect of any hard situation you’ve been in. Steinbeck uses George’s character and his caring nature to convey this message.
In Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck writes about the life of two men, George and Lennie, whom are constantly challenged with conflict. ‘George and Lennie’ is a diverse couple. George is a small featured man whom looks after Lennie throughout their travels trying to keep them safe from harm. George is the decision maker, while Lennie simply follows whatever George says…even though he doesn’t always listen. Lennie is his opposite - a physically large, strong man but with the mind of a child. Even though not diagnosed it is established he is mentally disabled, and George refuses to admit it to himself. Throughout the novel the pair sticks together in hopes they will each cure each other’s loneliness inside, their longing for a friend. They search
Lenny is robust and clinging on George. Lenny cannot live without someone directing him what to do. George was also good at making Lenny sympathetic. George doesn't want Lenny to endangered other people. Lenny does dull things like he gets worked up when his Future Cats are going to endanger his Future Rabbits