Curley's Wife Analysis

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"George said, "She's gonna make a mess. They's gonna be a bad mess about her. She's jail bait all set on the trigger. That Curley got his work cut out for him. Ranch with a bunch of guys on it ain't no place for a girl, specially like her." John Steinbeck, author of Of Mice and Men, was born in a time period where women were considered only good for basic chores around the house. The character Curley's wife accurately portrays how women are seen in the time period. It is mostly branching from her not being called by her first name. Curley's wife shows women to be inferior and subordinate to men while her absence of a first name is included in all of the issues.

Many things result from Curley's wife having no name, but the first is that zero respect is shown to her. Since calling someone by their first name is a sign of respect, inferring can deduct, based on Curley's wife, that women are not shown much respect. She is never once called by her first name throughout the story, nor was she shown respect, but in this quote,"Yeah,"said Whit."We don't never go there. Clara gets three bucks a crack and thirty-five cents a shot, and she don't crack no jokes. But Susy's place is clean and she got nice chairs." Susy's place is a prostitute house, and she is actually referred to on first names meaning that Curley's …show more content…

Women without their own identities, being called just their husbands wife. Her being called by her first name would show a sign of respect to her which was not how the world thought of women. The men not respecting her and not trying to be nice to her results in her disconnection from the rest of the group. They don't even try to be nice to her and call her many mean names like ''rat trap" and "jail bait" to push her down and away more. All of this was normal though in the 1930s. In conclusion, she is seen as just a flirtatious women who was out of her place on a

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