Migrant Workers In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

Words: 684
Pages: 3

Many migrant workers in America struggle poverty. They work many hours and only get payed little money. If one place doesn't work out they move to the next to try to find something to do to earn money. The story Of Mice and Men would be the same if it took place in modern day America instead of the Great Depression. The Great Depression was a tough time. Many needed jobs so they could have money for themselves. In the story Of Mice and Men George and Lennie had a job in Weed California, all up until Lennie got in some trouble. They had to leave Weed and go find work somewhere else. Work was hard to find during the Great Depression but luckily George and Lennie found a job quite easily. Today in modern America, migrant workers try to find jobs to earn money for their families. Most are immigrants that left their country to find …show more content…
You had Crooks the stable man who was African American and was excluded from the rest of the men on the ranch. There was Curley’s wife who thought no one wanted her because no one would look at her let alone talk to her. And then there was Lennie who was mentally disabled and a big guy so he was always picked on by Curley when he didn’t do anything wrong. This is how it is in modern day America. We think of migrant works as so much less than we are but they’re not. They are as equal as we are maybe even better. They work for their own money, they pay their way through life, the experience hardship, adventure, happiness, diversity, friendship and many more qualities that we don’t even try to look towards. Some Americans don’t experience hardship because everything is given to them. Some don’t experience adventure or diversity because they are so wrapped up in their own world that they don’t bother to see what is happening around them. Like in the story Of Mice and Men no one but Lennie actually notices how lonely Crooks is, but no one trusts Lennie because he is mentally