Curley's wife will rather be an actress in the movie.
Curley's wife married Curley because she wanted to escape her unsatisfying home life and seek attention and companionship. She saw Curley as her ticket to a more exciting and adventurous life, despite the consequences of his controlling and violent behavior.
Steinbeck doesn't give Curley's wife a name, to show that Curley has ownership of her, and depicting her as more of a piece of property than an actual person.
Lennie is facinated because he finds her pretty, but frightened because George and Candy said that she is trouble because she is curleys wife.soory if my answer is a little middle school like =p
Curley's wife was treated badly due to the social norms and gender expectations of the time, which limited women's rights and opportunities. She was often objectified and marginalized by the men on the ranch, who saw her as a temptation and a troublemaker rather than as a person with her own dreams and desires.
No. "Rather than" is wrong. The proper construction is " as well... as."
After asking what happened to Curley's hand, the men repeat the story that he got his hand caught in a machine. Curley's wife says she likes machines because she likes the fact that somebody hurt Curley: "She turned to Lennie. 'I'm glad you bust up Curley a little bit. He got it comin' to him. Sometimes I'd like to bust him myself.'" Section Four.
No, Candy's opinion of Curley's wife is not justified. His view of her as a troublemaker and a threat to the men on the ranch is influenced by stereotypes and prejudice, rather than her actual behavior. She is lonely and seeking companionship, and Candy's judgment of her is unfair.
Curley likely chose his wife based on physical attraction and the status she brought him as the boss's daughter. However, their marriage is portrayed as largely unhappy and driven by possessiveness rather than genuine love or compatibility.
The fight between Lennie and Curley shows that Curley is aggressive, combative, and quick to assert his dominance. On the other hand, Lennie is portrayed as simple-minded and unintentionally destructive, reacting impulsively out of fear and self-defense rather than malice.
he is married but no children yet.. dnt with other girls rather than his wife, if he has children.....
Curley is quite violent in the book/movie. Curley is the son of the boss. He is one of those little guys who does not like bigger men, simply because they are bigger than he is. Curley thinks everyone wants his wife. He is described as being quite "handy".
she is not married to anyone. She is single