john steinbeck’s of mice and men

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JOHN STEINBECK’S OF MICE AND MEN THREADS

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THREADS. JOHN STEINBECK’S OF MICE AND MEN. THEME: CAIN AND ABEL Authors: William Goldhurst and Harold Bloom: “Bloom’s Notes: Of Mice and Men” 1999 p. 339-341. Argument: The central guiding principle of the novel is the theme of Cain and Abel. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

JOHN STEINBECK’S OF MICE AND MEN

THREADS

Page 2: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

THEME: CAIN AND ABELAuthors: William Goldhurst and Harold Bloom: “Bloom’s Notes: Of Mice and Men” 1999 p. 339-341

Argument: The central guiding principle of the novel is the theme of Cain and Abel.

“The mythical discourse theme that is present throughout the novel is the question of man’s destiny and fate, which Cain is noted to have asked God.”

Page 3: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

THEME: CAIN AND ABEL Comes from

chapter 4 of Genesis in the Old Testament.

Immediately follows the Creation and Expulsion (from the Garden of Eden) of Adam and Eve.

Page 4: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

THEME: CAIN AND ABEL

Cain and Abel were sons of Adam and Eve.

Cain was a farmer, but his offerings of agricultural produce to the Lord failed to find favor; Abel, the second son, offered livestock, which was well received.

Page 5: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

THEME: CAIN AND ABEL

Angry, jealous, and rejected, Cain killed Abel when they were working in the field.

When the Lord inquired of Cain, “Where is your brother?” Cain replied: “I know not: Am I my brother’s keeper?”

Page 6: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

THEME: CAIN AND ABEL

Cain was marked by the Lord so as to preserve him from the wrath of others.

He left home and went to the land of Nod, which the story says lies east of Eden.

Page 7: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

THEME: CAIN AND ABEL

For his crime, the Lord banished Cain and set upon him a curse that Cain was to become homeless, a wanderer, and an agricultural laborer who would never possess or enjoy the fruits of his labor.

Page 8: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

THEME: CAIN AND ABEL

Where does the story find application in Of Mice and Men?

The relationship of George and Lennie, and the reactions of the other characters to that relationship.

Page 9: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

THEME: CAIN AND ABEL

George and Lennie have a brotherly, mutual concern for each other and faithful companionship.

“If them other guys gets in jail they can rot for all anybody gives a damn. But not us.”

“…because I got you to look after me, and you got me to look after you.”

Page 10: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

THEME: CAIN AND ABEL

Secondly, this sort of camaraderie is rare, almost unique in the world George and Lennie inhabit.

Other men are solitary souls without friends or companions (such as Candy).

So the alternative to George and Lennie is aloneness: The migratory ranch worker seems to be the fulfillment of the Lord’s curse on Cain.

Page 11: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

SETTING: GARDEN OF EDEN Takes place along

the Salinas River, a few miles south of Soledad, California.

Steinbeck often used California as symbolic of a fallen world or lost Eden.

“The Promised Land” is a painful and illusory dream.

Page 12: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

PARALLELS: CANDY Let’s consider Candy. It’s easy to see the

parallel between the shooting of Candy’s dog by Carlson, and the shooting of Lennie by George.

But Lennie and Candy are very similar.

Candy needs someone to look after his affairs: He needs George and the dream farm.

Page 13: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

PARALLELS: CANDY However, after Lennie’s

death, George declines to get the farm with Candy, even though Candy is still more than willing to put up the money.

This proves that being in one safe place with Lennie was more important to George than simply being in one safe place.

Page 14: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

PARALLELS: CANDY He elects to continue living

the hard life of a ranch hand rather than settle down to life on a small farm with Candy.

This may be the true tragedy in the book.

It’s not just that George loved Lennie too much, but this unnatural attachment (for this time) is the only reason why George could put up with and do so much for Lennie in the first place.

Page 15: JOHN STEINBECK’S  OF MICE AND MEN

PARALLELS: CANDY Without Lennie, George

sentences himself to the same fate as the other migrant workers: a life of loneliness.

So when Lennie dies, the dream of the farm dies with him.

While his weakness doomed the dream, it was only his innocence that kept it alive.