How Does Steinbeck Present The Discrimination In Of Mice And Men

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Of Mice and Men: Discrimination Discrimination. Discrimination is a very well-known topic. It has been going on for a very long time and some have even experienced it. Discrimination was a major issue a long time ago and still can be today. In the short novel Of Mice and Men, written by John Steinbeck , the topic discrimination is often shown throughout the novel. The novel includes the main characters, George and Lennie, who are best friends and migrant workers. Through their actions and other characters actions, Steinbeck exposes the theme that people who experience discrimination may continue the cycle. One of the ways Steinbeck illustrates the effects of discriminations is through interactions between characters. In the beginning of the novel, …show more content…

One night George, Lennie, Slim, and Carlson, which are other people who work at the farm as well as George and Lennie, are in the bunkhouse. Then, another worker named Candy comes into the room with his old dog. Carlon and some of the others thinks that the old dog stinks and shouldn’t be alive any more. Carlson suggests to Candy, ‘‘Why’n’t you shoot him Candy’’ (44)? Just because Candy’s dog was old and stinky Carlson was willing to kill the dog. Therefore, this expresses the theme because it shows that the people wanted to get rid of anything that was different from the normal. Later in the novel, a character named Curley’s wife goes into the barn to find Lennie, Candy, and Crooks, the farm’s stablehand. She said that ‘‘they left all the weak ones here’’ (77). Curley’s wife was often discriminated against because she was a women; it