Of Mice And Men Loneliness Analysis

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The Different Forms of Lonliness

What would you do for the people closest to you? Would you go to the ends of the earth for them? Take a bullet for them? How about move to a completely new place just to help get them out of trouble? In the book Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, that’s exactly what a working man named George does for his friend, Lennie. Throughout the story, the pair travel together in hopes of making enough money to buy their own ranch and live worry free. However, their journey takes many unexpected twists, and Lennie and George must help one another along the way. All through the book, they are asked why they travel together, a fair question, considering not many men during that time period traveled together. The answer is simple; neither one of them wants to
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The only African American worker on the ranch, Crooks, shares that no visits him in his room or talks to him outside of work because of racial discrimination. Crooks is forced to be alone, saying to Lennie, “I tell ya a guy gets too lonely an’ he gets sick.” He recounts times as a child when his father didn’t want him to play with the white kids who lived by them, and how, “If I say something, why it’s just a nigger sayin’ it.” Crooks has no one to confide in or relate to because for most, if not all of his life, he has been an outcast just for being black. In the same sense, Curley’s wife feels alone because she has no one to open up to. She tries make connections with the guys at the ranch by flirting, but she is harshly judged for never staying put inside the house and waiting for Curley to come home. But she’s unhappy in her marriage, and she doesn’t want to spend the rest of her life locked up in a house waiting for her husband, who doesn’t spend time with her. Curley’s wife and Crooks may be surrounded by people, but that doesn’t change the fact that they both feel lonely at the end of the