John Steinbeck’s of Mice and Men as an Elegy of Friendship: An Absurdist Study of Human Condition
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Faculty of English
Abstract
This study is specifically concerned with the representation of the tragic
devastation of human inter-personal relationship as a consequence of catastrophic
economic and ecological crisis in America through the 1930s. Beyond the revelation
of the pathetic devastation of family society, life, dream, and hopes of the people the
most significantly, it depicts the obliteration of special individual relationship like
friendship. To prove the thesis statement, data for this research were collected from
textual reading and analytical library research. The primary and secondary data were
reviewed focusing authentic, academic, and commercial references. On the basis of
the results of this dissertation, it can be concluded that the novel is basically a
reflection of absurdist human condition lamenting on the collapse of human dreams,
hopes, and broken relationship. Elegy is a literary vehicle used to vent human
experiences, feelings, and perceptions as a response to the loss of nearest and dearest
person and thing. Absurdism, as a school of thought, refers meaningfully meaningless
void situation created from the conflict between human’s futile efforts to search for
meaning and the nonsensical hostile universe.