Will Steinbeck condemn Collie's wife, or if he sympathizes with her? Women were often repressed and treated as things when novels "rats and men" appeared throughout California in the 1930's. They are lying down and they are often cruel. They are forced to do whatever they say, otherwise they are blamed by their families and the masses. Some of these questions are reflected in Curly 's wife' s personality. At various stages of her life, this character is drawn in various ways.
How does Steinbeck express the characteristics of Cory's wife and its attitude towards women? Because Curley's wife is the only major woman in Steinbeck's novel, she represents how much futile dreams she has on behalf of all the women who appear in this short-lived fable. Does she take full responsibility for the demise of George and Lenny's dream, or is she just a misunderstood role? She may be one of the more complex characters - not "bad" like Curley or "good" like Slim. Due to an unstable marriage with Curley, she has no friends in the ranch, but has a cruel relationship with other abandoned people. Ironically, abandoned people like Crucs, Candy, Lenny have many commonalities in common. A broken person, however, a person with a low rank like a candy is very skeptical and distrustful. We introduced her rudely through the men first.
She is portrayed as a prostitute through provocative appearance and derogatory behavior. John Steinbeck did not deliberately name her, because she was only known as Collie's wife, she owns Curley. Curley's wife was forced to understand that her sexuality is the only weapon. . Curley's wife is brittle and innocent, and she expresses her human nature by comforting herself with Lennie. But Curley's wife seems to regret that she did not accept any male proposal.
As Steinbeck painted, Collie's wife opposed Renee's innocence. Steinbeck has certain responsibility for killing the victim himself. Again and again, her violation of Lenny 's Curly and Carrie' s wife 's circumstances was accompanied with sex, and her proposal to make Lenny touch her hair may be seen as sexual progress . She even even appealed this proposal by complaining of loneliness and dissatisfaction in her marriage. No matter how honest and pitifully these complaints are, she is ultimately a self-absorbing and manipulative personality. She did not understand the dangers of Lenny - there was evidence that he was violent in the handicapping hands of her husband - but his clash with her husband She went to Lenny I think he is a childish partner of her husband - a harmless worshiper. Therefore, she "guided him" and used an old excuse to rape a woman.