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  1. Jun 19, 2013 · Curley’s Wife is the only major female in Steinbeck’s novel, and as such, she represents all women in this short parable about how futile dreams are. Is she solely responsible for the end of George and Lennie’s dream, or is she just a misunderstood character?

  2. Despite Steinbeck’s rendering, Curley's wife emerges as a relatively complex and interesting character. Although her purpose is rather simple in the book’s opening pages—she is the “tramp,” “tart,” and “bitch” that threatens to destroy male happiness and longevity—her appearances later in the novella become more complex.

  3. Curley's wife in "Of Mice and Men" is a complex character who represents loneliness and unfulfilled dreams. She is often portrayed as flirtatious and desperate for attention,...

    • Curley’s Wife
    • First Impressions Count
    • Good-Looking
    • Clothing
    • The Seductress

    Steinbeck only refers to the character through the possessive noun “Curley’s”. By leaving the her unnamed and limiting her status to his wife, the author suggests to the reader she is powerless and lacks the ability to create her own identity. Interestingly, her ambition to star in the “pitchers” and become famous would see her name splashed across...

    Without any authorial intrusion, Steinbeck initially presents Curley’s Wife through the men’s biased opinions and they are quick to comment on her appearance and sexuality. In chapter two, Candy says “I think Curley’s married… a tart” and George calls her a “tramp”. A “tart” is a girl who dresses provocatively to tease men and “tramp” also suggests...

    The men set up this intriguing picture of Curley’s Wife and she does not disappoint the reader because Steinbeck creates a simple but effective and exotic description of her appearance that allows us to visualise the character and her beauty. When she first appears in the gloomy bunkhouse, the writer mentions her “full, rouged lips” and the fact “h...

    Her femininity is clear in the simple “cotton house dress” which doesn’t sound provocative but, to these lonely men, it is enough to call her a “tart”. For example, in chapter three, Whit comments to George “You’ll see plenty. She ain’t concealin’ nothing”. She wears “red mules” with “little bouquets of red ostrich feathers”. Red is obviously a tra...

    When she talks to George and Lennie in chapter two, “she put her hands behind her back and leaned against the door frame so that her body was thrown forward”. Her movement is sexually suggestive because she deliberately positions herself in a way to emphasise her body and curves. By enabling the reader to picture Curley’s Wife so vividly, we become...

  4. Nov 26, 2014 · Of all the characters in the novella, Curley’s wife is the one that shows this to be the case in the most pointed and poignant way. She enters the action as a vulnerable young married woman and leaves the plot in a manner that does not befit her dreams and aspirations in this life.

  5. A+ Student Essay: Unfulfilled Dreams. In Of Mice and Men, it seems an incontrovertible law of nature that dreams should go unfulfilled. From George and Lennie’s ranch to Curley’s wife’s stardom, the characters’ most cherished aspirations repeatedly fail to materialize.

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  7. Curleys wife regrets the path her life has taken, and laments having missed her chance to move to Hollywood and become a movie star. To make up for her misery and loneliness, she tries to connect with other people, but finds herself thwarted at every turn.