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What Do We Learn About Crooks in Chapter 4 of “of Mice and Men

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What Do We Learn About Crooks in Chapter 4 of “Of Mice and Men”?

This essay will uncover information about the “Negro Stable Buck”, named Crooks in of Mice and Men. The essay will analyze information regarding crooks, in link to themes such as the unattainable American dream, themes of racial discrimination , as well as themes such as loneliness and isolation. An understanding of the character of Crooks requires an understanding of the status of black people in the West during the time of when the book is set, during the 1920s Depression, as it can be seen during the novel, and especially throughout Chapter 4, that Crook’s experiences on the ranch were those almost indistinguishable from the rest of Black Americans during the era when …show more content…

I could get you strung up on a tree so easy it aint even funny”. These comments make Crooks realize his place as a Black man, and as inferior to a white woman. Jolted into the comprehension of the nasty comments by Curley’s wife, he refuses to believe that she is wrong in her ideology, and instead accept the fact that he cannot stop living with racism, and takes back the comments he previously said; “Member what I said about hoein and doin odd jobs?…Well jus forget it, I didn’t mean it. Jus’ foolin. I wouldn’t want to go ni place like that”. From Chapter 4, we can tell that though Crooks has an ever-present American Dream, one where he is deemed equal among his white workers, in his sense it is no more than a dream, as the constant reminder of his Black skin and subsequent discrimination is far superior than his will to dream that one day his American Dream will come true.

In link to the previous two themes we have discussed in this essay, the next point will talk about the theme of racial discrimination, in regards to Crooks. It can be said that all of the negativity towards Crooks, throughout the entire Novel, can be linked to the racial discrimination, and subsequent segregation of blacks during the Depression era in the 1920s. From quotes such as “Crooks, the Negro stable buck had his bunk in the harness room; a little shed that leaned off the wall of the barn”, we can already learn that Crooks is segregated from the rest of the

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