Crooks says he was just foolin' about working on the ranch as a defense mechanism to protect himself from getting hurt or disappointed. By pretending that he doesn't want to be a part of the group, Crooks maintains a sense of control and distance to shield himself from potential rejection or mistreatment. This is his way of coping with the racism and isolation he faces on the ranch.
Crooks says he was just fooling about working at the ranch to protect himself emotionally. As a Black man in a racially discriminatory society, Crooks feels the need to keep his guard up to avoid getting hurt. By pretending that he doesn't want to work at the ranch, he can maintain a sense of control and protect his vulnerable emotions.
It all depends on the size of the ranch. A ranch can have anywhere from just one (being the owner/manager) to 20 cowboys working there.
Crooks is a character in "Of Mice and Men" who represents the isolation and racial discrimination experienced by African Americans during the Great Depression. His purpose in the novel is to highlight the pervasive prejudice and social hierarchy of the time, and to provide insight into the effects of loneliness and discrimination on an individual.
I dont know im just foolin around i need help
Around 15 years of age. Some ranchers get their kids to start working on a ranch ten years sooner...not that they're forcing their children into labour, it's just that a child at that age can start learning the responsibilities and work that is involved with working on a ranch.
Crooks later rejected the idea of buying the ranch because he felt it was just a dream that would never come true for him. He believed that his race and the societal prejudices against him would prevent him from ever being able to truly have a place of his own.
A Ranch hand is just a fancy word for cowboys or cowgirls, basically people, primarily of men (and a few hardy women of course!) who work on a ranch helping with tending to livestock and range management, as well as other duties that are necessary on a working ranch.
Just plain ol' "Ranch" will suit any sized ranch just fine.
Lennie Crooks often stretches the truth or bends the rules in order to increase his own benefits or achieve his personal goals, even if it means taking advantage of others or causing harm in the process.
Crooks rejects the dream of a ranch after Curley's wife leaves his room because he believes that it is impossible for someone like him, a black man, to achieve such a dream. He has been discriminated against and oppressed for so long that he has lost hope in the possibility of a better future. Curley's wife's cruel reminder of his place in society only reinforces his belief that dreams are unattainable for people like him.
"Ranch with a bunch of guys ain't no place for a girl." "They'll can me pretty soon... I won't have no place to go." "A guy on a ranch don't never listen nor he don't ask no questions" chap 2.
Crooks is an African American man who back then are treated like they are nothing. He couldn't live in the bunk house with the others because he's black and he wasn't allowed to play cards with others because the others assumed he suck at playing before letting him play. Again, just because he's black.