A Psychological Reading of The Problem of the Black in John Steinbeck’s Of (Mice and Men)

Authors

  • Ban Salah Shaalan University of Baghdad, College of Languages, Department of English Language, Baghdad, Iraq

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36586/jcl.2.2020.0.41.0069

Keywords:

alienation, Fanon, psychological impact, racism, segregation.

Abstract

The present paper applies Fanon Psychological reading of the problem of the Black introduced in his book Black Skin White Mask to Crooks, The black Character in John Steinbeck’s  Of Mice and Men. The analysis of this character infers three essential points regarding the artistic achievement of the author. First, he uses a fictional character that offers a psychological interpretation of the black problem of alienation and loneliness in a way that does not disgrace the black. Second, he applies Fanon’s way of showing the various attitudes that the black adopts in contact with the white society. Third, he affirms that the black inferiority complex comes as a result of double process: economic and the internalization of this complex.

Author Biography

  • Ban Salah Shaalan, University of Baghdad, College of Languages, Department of English Language, Baghdad, Iraq

           Ban Salah Shaalan is Instructor in the English department/ College of Languages/ University of Baghdad. She has conducted courses in novel (Victorian and modern), Drama (medieval and Elizabethan) and English as a Second Language at the College of Languages’ non departments.

     Email: [email protected]

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Published

2020-01-02

Issue

Section

Department of English language

How to Cite

A Psychological Reading of The Problem of the Black in John Steinbeck’s Of (Mice and Men). (2020). Journal of the College of Languages (JCL), 41, 74-85. https://doi.org/10.36586/jcl.2.2020.0.41.0069

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