The Relationship Between George and Lennie and How It Is Presented.

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Steinbeck presents Lennie and George’s relationship as one of dominance. George leads Lennie and shows him the way and shows him how to act, ‘one stayed behind the other’ shows that Lennie is a follower and needs a leader. This is also shown when George says sharply, ‘Lennie, for god sake don’t so much.’ This could be due to the fact that Lennie acts like a child, 'look, George, look what i done,’ shows that he looks for praise and that he wants to impress George. Lennie may say this to show how important George's opinion is and how important he is to Lennie. Steinbeck uses the dream to show George and Lennie’s relationship. The shared dream gives both men something to look forward to but for different reasons, which shows how different the two men are. Lennie looks for ‘tending the rabbits’ and for George it gives him security and control. The dream was what most ranch workers had in the great depression but for Lennie and George it is different because they are sharing it. Lennie is more excited about it than George, ‘come on George, tell me.’ Repeats Lennie, suggesting that although he knows what the dream is, he wants to hear it again to give him some security and hope. Throughout the first section stienbeck emphaisises how unusual the friendship is. Firstly he descirbes the two men as completely different. Lennie is animal-like ‘the way a bear drags his paws.’ And George is controlled, ‘everypart of him was defined.’ This shows how the friendship is weird because of how different they are and Steinbeck also tells the reader that ranch workers are alone. This timie in America is when workers travelled to California alone to find work, and having relationships was not normal. Steinbeck tells us this when George is describing the dream, ‘guys like us...are the loneliest guys in the world. They got no family’ George is annoyed by Lennie’s behaviour and shouts

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