Power, Justice, and Culpability: Of Mice and Men and The Central Park Five

Lesson 12
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ELA

Unit 3

9th Grade

Lesson 12 of 30

Objective


Analyze the structural choices Steinbeck has made in the final chapter of Of Mice and Men and how he works to shape the reader's perception of Lennie's murder.

Readings and Materials


  • Book: Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck  — pp. 93–end

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Target Task


Writing Prompt

In her article, "Is Lennie a Monster? A reconsideration of Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men in a 21st-century inclusive classroom context," scholar Claire Lawrence writes:

"Steinbeck positions the story so that the reader's sympathies at the end of it lie with George, despite and indeed regarding his killing of Lennie."

In a paragraph, explain how Steinbeck crafts the text so that the reader feels sympathetic for—rather than critical of—George at the end of the text. Provide specific examples from the final two chapters and carefully explain your thinking.

Sample Response

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Key Questions


Close Read Questions

  • Consider the opening description of the first and final chapters (before the characters enter the scene). What do you notice about the imagery and mood in each? How does Steinbeck's choices regarding imagery and mood reflect the situation of the characters at the time? Provide specific examples and evidence from both chapters and carefully explain your thinking.

  • Consider the first and final interaction between George and Lennie. What do you notice about the way that Steinbeck has structured his story? What is the significance of these choices? Provide specific examples and evidence from both chapters and carefully explain your thinking.

  • Where in the text does Steinbeck foreshadow Lennie's murder? How are these situations similar and how are they different? Provide specific evidence from the text and carefully explain your thinking.

Vocabulary


Text-based

belligerent

adj.

hostile and aggressive

monotonous

adj.

1. lacking in variation of vocal tone or pitch 2. boring, repetitive; lacking in variety

Notes


The question of whether Lennie's murder was "justified" is commonly brought up for debate in high school classrooms. We believe that asking students to consider "both sides" of this question is to invite them to engage in eugenicist thinking about the inherent worth — or lack thereof — of disabled lives. It is not possible to separate George's decision to murder Lennie from the fact that Lennie has an intellectual disability. And it is therefore not possible to separate our thinking about Lennie's murder from a larger cultural conversation about the worth and "human subjectivity," of disabled people. 

Instead, we believe that a more fruitful – and less harmful – pursuit is to have students consider the way that Steinbeck has crafted this final part of the text, particularly the decisions he has made in order to sway the reader's sympathies toward George.

Additionally, we have made the decision to use the word "murder," when referring to what George did. 

The men in today's text refer to Lennie as "nuts," an ableist term.

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Standards


  • RL.9-10.3 — Analyze how complex characters (e.g., those with multiple or conflicting motivations) develop over the course of a text, interact with other characters, and advance the plot or develop the theme.
  • RL.9-10.5 — Analyze how an author's choices concerning how to structure a text, order events within it (e.g., parallel plots), and manipulate time (e.g., pacing, flashbacks) create such effects as mystery, tension, or surprise.

Supporting Standards

L.9-10.1
L.9-10.6
RL.9-10.1
RL.9-10.2
RL.9-10.10
SL.9-10.1
SL.9-10.6
W.9-10.1
W.9-10.9
W.9-10.10

Next

Analyze the Robert Burns poem, "To a Mouse" and draw conclusions about why Steinbeck chose a line from this poem for the title of his novel.

Lesson 13
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