True Justice In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

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The Dilemma of True Justice In life people are faced with dilemmas, big and small. Ultimately a choice must be made between doing what is right and wrong. Of Mice and Men portrays a story of a mentally retarded man, Lennie, and his caretaker George. George is faced with the dilemma of killing Lennie or letting him face the justice of his peers. Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, stresses that in order for true justice to occur, society needs to recognize respect. Social status plays a major role in determining the justice of one’s actions. George sees Lennie as a liability and feels obligated to take care of him because he can not care for himself. George informs Lennie, “...if you jus’ happen to get in trouble like you always done before, I want you to come …show more content…

Although Lennie does not mean any harm, George still expects him to make poor choices. Lennie unintentionally kills Curley’s wife which causes the ranchers to ponder his fate. Society, in this case the ranch, does not recognize Lennie’s disability as a factor to his poor choices. The ranchers do not respect Lennie’s disability and decide he has committed an unforgivable action. Lennie has killed a human and for true justice to be served he needs to suffer the same consequences as any other. In the article On John Steinbeck’s of Mice and Men, Nate Brown states, “it’s a novel that clearly condemns exploitation, that exalts a dream of communal subsistence living, and in which a mercy killing is an honorable and humane alternative to ‘justice’”. The ranch has its own justice system and has its own set of rules

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