Of Mice and Men

Can you write me a thesis about the characters feeling guilty in Of Mice and Men?

can you write me a thesis about the characters feeling guilty in mice of men

Asked by
Last updated by Johnnie S #1360437
Answers 1
Add Yours

In John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, the pervasive sense of guilt haunting characters like George, Candy, and Curley’s wife serves as a raw reflection of their fractured humanity, exposing how societal marginalization amplifies personal failings. Their guilt rooted in powerlessness, regret, and unfulfilled responsibility—not only humanizes them in a world that devalues vulnerability but also critiques a system that traps individuals in cycles of self-condemnation, revealing how moral anguish becomes inseparable from survival in an unjust society.Steinbeck crafts guilt not as a flaw but as a testament to their muted conscience. George’s final act, Candy’s quiet remorse over his dog, and Curley’s wife’s stifled longing all become silent confessions of complicity in a world that strips them of agency. Their guilt, tender and suffocating, mirrors the reader’s own empathy, blurring the line between judgment and compassion.

Source(s)

Owens, Louis. John Steinbeck’s Re-Vision of America. University of Georgia Press, 1985. Critical Essays on Of Mice and Men (Various Authors). Steinbeck, John. Of Mice and Men. 1937.