Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Of Mice and Men:
Setting
Anmerkungen:
- The bunkhouse
- "the walls were whitewashed, the floor unpainted"
- The bare and sparsely decorated room reminds the
reader of a prison, as though the ranch workers were
held there against their will. As migrant workers were
poor, nomadic and looking for work, they would take
whatever job they could get, even if they didn't like it.
The workers were of low status, and thought of as not
deserving of a proper room, as Curley and the boss
undoubtedly have.
- "Over each bunk there was a nailed apple box with the
opening forward so it made two shelves.."
- The resourcefulness of the workers suggests that they are used to having
little material possessions, and having to use what resources they can get.
The Great Depression meant that many people lost jobs and homes, forcing
them to become resourceful and use any materials they could find in order for
them and their families to survive
- "out of the beam flies shot like rushing stars"
- 'Rushing stars' suggests that the flies are beautiful, something
usually not associated with an insect. This suggests that the
ranch workers, working in dust-filled Calafornia, are not used to
the sight of something beautiful, since the drought stole away
the land.
- Crooks' Room
- "a little shed that leaned off the wall of the barn"
- During the 1930's, discrimination was common and
segregation meant that white and black people were
kept seperate from each other, according to a set of
laws.
- "on pegs there were pieces of harness,a split collar with horse hair stuffing sticking out"
- Crooks had to share a room with the horse and the other animals,
suggesting that the ranch workers believe that he is no more than an
animal, and should be hidden away and seperated from the rest of the
workers. The equipment for the animals is kept in Crooks' room, and he
is forced to sleep in a 'long box filled with straw'. Even the bunk house
seems preferable to Crooks' room
- The Clearing
- "strong and rocky Galiban mountains"
- The unforgiving country side made it even
more difficult for migrant workers to find a
job as they had to walk for miles through the
tough countryside, in the midst of a drought
- "a path beaten hard by boys...and beaten hard by
tramps"
- The country path is worn down
by the migrant workers looking for
work during the era of the Great
Depression, and worn down by
those out of work, looking for
water and shelter.
- "Evening of a hot day"
- The ten year drought that hit South America
caused a huge disruption tot he crops as the
'Dust Bowl' hit the farms that many families had
invested their lives into.The endlessly hot days
made it hard for people to get water for
themselves and their crops, meaning that many
plants did not grow.