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How Does Steinbeck Present Curley's Wife

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Steinbeck represents Curley as an arrogant and self-centered man. This might be because his wife is a flirt and craves attention from people as she doesn't receive it from her husband. She knows that her beauty is the only way she can get attention from other men as she is young and attractive. Therefore other men in the ranch label her as a "tart", "jailbait" and she's got "the eye", which is a stereotype that the men place on her. This also gives an impression to the reader that she is out to cause trouble and eventually she does cause trouble for the men as well as making a big mistake of her own undoing. Curley's wife is wearing a "red cotton house dress" and a pair of mules decorating with "bouquets red ostrich feathers" emphasising her sexual presence. Her clothes are also described as "red" referred to the colour of love and compassion. Also, the bouquets red ostrich feathers would have been very expensive in the times Of Mice and Men was set; and that she only wore them in the middle of the "Dust bowl" which suggests that she was desperate for attention and she was willing to ruin her best shoes in order to allure the men, despite the fact that she has a husband.

Steinbeck is creating a much richer character …show more content…
They have the need to show other people that they are important as men and deserve to be treated equally as them which is shown through the way they dress as they represent social class by their clothes. They take advantage of their power and use it to make themselves feel more valuable as women. Sybil and Curley's wife were both looked down upon because of their gender, they were both treated poorly but in different ways as they were aware of their gender status. However, they also know that they have to follow their husbands command to be respected socially as in that time women had to be demure and submitted to

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