Thursday, September 19, 2019
In this essay, I am going to write about the social and historical
In this essay, I am going to write about the social and historical   context of Of Mice and Men, and how the dreams of certain people in   the ranch went wrong and ended in tragedy.    In this essay, I am going to write about the social and historical  context of 'Of Mice and Men', and how the dreams of certain people in  the ranch went wrong and ended in tragedy. Most of the characters in  'Of Mice and Men' admit, at one point or another, to dreaming of a  different life. Before her death, Curley's wife confesses her desire  to be a movie star. Crooks allows himself the for the fantasy of  hoeing a patch of garden on Lennie's farm one day, and Candy latches  on desperately to George's vision of owning a couple of acres.    John Steinbeck wrote this novel because he wanted people to realise  the consequences of the great American depression between 1930 and  1940. It showed how people interacted with each other and it showed  the misery of the economical depression and how poor and different  race people were treated. In 'Of Mice and Men' Steinbeck describes how  punishing and challenging the life of migrant farmers could be. Just  as George and Lennie dream of a better life on their own farm, these  farmers dreamed of finding a better life in their world. The state  where they lived promised a climate for a longer growing season and it  offered more opportunities to harvest crops. Despite these promises,  very few found it to be the land of opportunity and plenty of which  they dreamed.    George and Lennie are migrant American labourers. George protects his  friend from the insecure world and shares with him a dream of one day  settling down and farming their own land to live a better life. The  farm that George describes to Len...              ... why, even though he has reason to doubt George  and Lennie's talk about the farm that they want to own, Crooks cannot  help but ask if there might be room for him to come along and hoe in  the garden. However, his desires would never come true because of the  time he lived, a time where such dreams for him were impossible to  become a reality.    All of these dreams were typically American dreams where dreamers wish  for untarnished happiness, for the freedom to follow their own  desires. George and Lennie's dream of owning a farm, which would  enable them to sustain themselves, and, most important, offer them  protection from an inhospitable world, represents typically American  ideal. Their journey, which awakens George to the impossibility of  this dream, sadly proves that Crooks is right that such paradise of  freedom and safety are not to be found in this world.                      
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