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Sunday, May 26, 2019

Curleys wife presented and developed Essay

John Steinbeck, in his novelette Of Mice and Men, deliberately presents Curleys married char as a character with no appellation, this pushes away the relationship between her and the referee. The fact that she has no appellation indicates to us that she is a generalised woman a typecast of women in the 1930s America, in which women were expected to stay at home to fulfil their housewife duties. Her appellation also indicates to us that she is the property of Curley, this dehumanizes her, she is melodic theme of as an object.Steinbeck first presents Curleys wife as a flirtatious bitter, and hence develops her as a dangerous, vulnerable, and fragile character. Steinbeck ensures that the reader feels unsympathetic towards her in the inception, and throughout the novella, and then allows the reader to feel slightly sympathetic just afore her death, as we find out she is just a lonely woman honest of dreams that are shattered. This is deliberately done once it is too late, her deat h is inevitable.This means that the audiences sympathy will always lie with Lennie, not Curleys wife. In chapter 2, Candy introduces George and Lennie to the ranch, after Curley has his moment with George and Lennie, Candy states waitll you see Curleys wifeShe got the eye, immediately Candys description of her reveals (before the reader even meets her) that she is flirtatious and interested in men although she has a husband, and therefore she is a tart. This is dangerous since she is married to the bosss son, who is always look for an altercation.Candy also reveals that Curley has a Glove fulla Vaseline, this immediately portrays Curleys wife as a sexual object. Indeterminately, she is first presented as a flirtatious tart, and a sexual object these could potentially equal disaster in the future. Steinbeck has purposely introduced her in this way as he desires us to hate and make no sympathy for her except for Lennie. In this novella, Curleys wife is referred to as a tart because of her flirtatious behaviour, and also, she is described as a girl as she is immature and vulnerable.However, the reader does not come back of her as a girl, as she has full, roughed lips, eyes, heavily made up, and red fingernails. The reader thinks of her as a woman, from the way her presence is described, and also the way she acts. Curleys wife is at times, a viciously unpleasant woman. In chapter 4, she enters Crooks Bunk house, after she is confronted by the tercet grown men, Lennie, Candy, and Crooks, she reduces Lennie and Candy to tonelessnothing. Then refers to Crooks as a Nigger.This is extremely shocking, particularly to a modern audience whereas in the 1930s the audience would find it conventional. Curleys wife has deliberately picked on Crooks, as hes complexion is described as black, and therefore socially weaker. Indeterminately, she has much power than him. This exposure of weakness ultimately concludes with Curleys wife threatening to have Crooks strung up. The f act that she is threatening to lie, and cry rape, to have an impoverished man killed for no appropriate reason, paints her in a profoundly negative light.After this, it makes Curleys wife highly unpredictable throughout the rest of the novella as Steinbeck has instantly developed her from being a flirtatious tart, to being an evil woman, the reader cannot predict what she will be like come on into the novella. After chapter 4, it emphasises how cruel Curleys wife can be and turns the reader against her even more. In chapter 5, Curleys wife seeks attention (as she usually does) as she goes into the barn, she encounters Lennie.Her reception after finding the murdered puppy is very serene, she isnt shocked since she states just a dead pup this makes her abnormal because a normal woman would not look at this situation from a neutral point of view. Further in chapter 5, the reader deduces that Curleys wife is lonely as she states I get awful lonely this makes the audience understand her even more because she is always seeking attention. After Curleys wife convinces Lennie into speaking with her, she then talks about how she could have been a Hollywood movie star but had her letter stolen, and therefore her opportunity was taken.The reader realises that her that her dreams were destroyed This links to the women in the 1930s, as they also has aspirations that were not accepted. Curleys wife believes that her mother stole her letter, as she states I think my old lady stole it the rallying cry think immediately tells the reader that she has no genuine evidence to prove this is true. Curleys wife ultimately leads to her own necrosis as she tells Lennie to touch her hair the word touch immediately reminds the reader about the incident in Weed.After touching Curleys wifes hair, Lennie then starts to stroke her hair in amazement, Curleys wife suddenly starts panicking whens she feels Lennies strength, and in grabbing her, Lennie breaks her neck by accident, causing in stant death. After Curleys wife death, the reader feels sympathetic towards her, as the reader recently finds out that she was just a lonely woman full of shattered dreams. As soon as Candy walks into the scene, the readers sympathy for the dead woman disappears as the reader realises that Lennie, George, and Cadys American dream have it all in one month is now no longer in reach, it has been destroyed.Curleys wife has represented the death of dreams as she is the reason for this. Unlike Lennie, Curleys wife had no excuse of being mentally slow so should have controlled her herself and therefore it is her fault, the reader regrets having sympathy for her. Curleys wife is a very unique character she is not a typical 1930s woman, as she is always outside of her house making her unable to carry out her duties, whereas a typical 1930s woman would always stay at home fulfilling their housewife duties. Curleys wife should have been interpreted as a typical 1930s woman.

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