The Role Of Dreams In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

Words: 750
Pages: 3

Dreams are life goals with no deadlines. They are the idea of an ideal life and perfect situation that people strive to live for, or just sitting in the back of their mind as a place of comfort and hope. The novel Of Mice And Men has a very dominant theme of dreams and how they can affect characters and their outlook on life. Dreams keeps you hopeful about the future, stuck in the past, or put a damper on your current life
The dream that played the biggest part in the story was George and Lennie’s dream to have their own farm. To both of them this dream was a kind of escape from the reality from life as the knew it. Migrant workers have very little control over their life because they are always being told what they need to do and how to do it. George having his own farm would mean he could have complete control of what he does, and would be his own boss. When George tells Lennie about the dream in the beginning of the book he emphasizes about the fact that they could
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Throughout the whole novel Curley’s wife felt lonely because she was looked at as just a thing that causes trouble. Her dream of being in the movies was a way to show others and convince herself she was worth more than what she had in life, and could have been something great. Hating her current life situation of not being able to talk to anyone she wanted nothing more than to have a grand life with fancy clothes and(). This dream caused her to try and get attention from the other workers to feel as though she was worth something, and used the fact she was the only girl on the ranch as an advantage to get the attention. The other small dream that plays into Curly’s wife's character is the fact that she desperately wants to no longer lonely, this causes her to talk to anyone who would listen. Overall, her dream keeps her trapped in the past and how her life could have