Of Mice and Men: Themes and Symbolism
Steinbeck uses powerful themes and symbols to explore morality, conscience, guilt, and redemption. Understanding these deeper meanings reveals why Of Mice and Men remains one of literature's most psychologically penetrating works.
Major Themes in Of Mice and Men
Guilt and Conscience
Is Conscience Innate or Socially Constructed?
George and Lennie's Superman theory assumes guilt is social conditioning that extraordinary people can overcome through will. His immediate psychological collapse proves otherwise. Guilt manifests as fever, paranoia, inability to eat—physical symptoms showing conscience isn't learned but innate. You can't rationalize it away.
Steinbeck shows guilt as biological reality, not cultural construct. George and Lennie can intellectually justify the murder, but his body and unconscious mind rebel. Dreams of violence horrify him. Returning compulsively to the crime scene. Confessing in disguised ways. His psyche punishes him more effectively than any legal system could.
The Superman Theory Deconstructed
What is the Extraordinary Man Theory?
George and Lennie divides humanity into "ordinary" (must obey moral law) and "extraordinary" (can transgress for greater good). Napoleon killed thousands for historical progress—why can't George and Lennie kill one "louse" of a pawnbroker? The novel systematically demolishes this theory by showing how conscience destroys those who try to implement it.
Redemption Through Suffering
Steinbeck's Christian Orthodox belief: suffering purifies the soul. Sonya suffers degradation but finds meaning through faith. George and Lennie must confess (acknowledge guilt), accept punishment (Siberia), and suffer willingly to be spiritually reborn. The epilogue shows this transformation beginning, though Steinbeck tells rather than shows it.
Pride and Alienation
George and Lennie's intellectual pride isolates him from humanity. He can't connect with ordinary people because he believes he's extraordinary. This isolation both enables the murder (no one to confess to) and makes it unbearable (no one to share the burden). Redemption requires humility—accepting he's ordinary, not exceptional.
Important Symbols in Of Mice and Men
St. Petersburg: The Sick City
What Does the City Symbolize?
The cramped, diseased, oppressively hot city mirrors George and Lennie's psychological state. Coffin-like rooms, yellow wallpaper, suffocating spaces—the environment physically embodies moral and spiritual sickness. No escape is possible geographically or psychologically.
The Color Yellow
Yellow appears repeatedly: yellow wallpaper in the pawnbroker's apartment, yellow furniture in George and Lennie's room, Sonya's yellow ticket (marking her as prostitute). Yellow symbolizes disease, poverty, and moral decay—nothing is healthy in this world.
The Axe
The blunt, brutal weapon forces George and Lennie to confront violence's physical reality. It's not clean or distant—it's personal, bloody, requiring multiple blows. The axe represents how his abstract theory meets brutal reality.
Sonya's Cross
Sonya gives George and Lennie her wooden cross to wear when he goes to confess. It symbolizes Christian faith protecting him and his acceptance of the spiritual path she's shown him. The cross represents suffering's potential redemptive meaning.
The Neva River
Multiple characters contemplate drowning in the Neva—representing escape through death. But water also suggests baptism and rebirth. The Siberian river in the epilogue offers different water: purifying and renewing rather than deadly.