Isolation and Alienation in Today's Society Evident in Of Mice and Men

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There is no hiding the provocative use of isolation in the novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. Isolationism can be defined as a policy of remaining apart from the affairs or interests of other groups. Steinbeck uses people of different race, sex, and mental capabilities to uncover the isolation and alienation society throws down upon people who are different. Lennie, a main character in the novel, is mentally handicapped and must obey George in order to make a living. Lenny is a large man and an excellent worker, but due to his mental deficiency, he is isolated from the rest of the workers on the ranch. The incorporation of isolation and alienation in the book Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck is brilliantly used to open the eyes of the reader about the apathy shown towards people who are not lucky enough to be considered “normal” by society’s standards.
John Steinbeck was born in Salinas, California in the the year 1902. He grew up in a farmland environment which helped him in his writings of this novel. Steinbeck actually went to school at Stanford but never graduated. He wrote an astonishing 25 books, of which sixteen were novels, six non-fiction books, and several short stories. If that was not impressive enough, in 1962, he received the nobel prize for literature. Through many of his books, he flooded his stories with characters who always seemed to struggle, many times about the working class and the immigrant workers during times like the Dust Bowl and the Great Depression. Over time, he noticed that he had a more profound, moving voice when using examples from his own memories in his writings as opposed to just making the stories up.
The first and most evident example of alienation and isolation in the novel is Len...

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...ther workers. Crooks is so badly isolated from the rest of the men that he is forced to live in his own area without contact from any of the other men. At one point, Lennie goes to Crooks’ room in an innocent attempt to make a new friend, but Crooks sharply shuts him down. Crooks said, “You got no right to come in my room. This here's my room. Nobody got any right in here but me” (Steinbeck 68). This quote is very significant in that is gives the reader a great sense of how strongly Crooks feels that his room is the only room in which he has any rights over the others. Steinbeck uses Crooks as a significant way in which society isolates people that are different. One last example that Steinbeck uses as a brilliant example of isolation is his insertion of Curley’s wife into the novel.

Works Cited

http://www.gradesaver.com/of-mice-and-men/study-guide/major-themes/

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