This GCSE English Literature quiz takes a look at setting in Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. The location and the time in which the events of a text take place are two significant elements of a work’s setting. In addition to the events explicitly taking place in a novel, there will be events occurring in the background to which characters might allude. This wider fictional world is known as context and is also a key component of its setting (fictional context should not, of course, be confused with the author’s real-life context). Another important element of setting is atmosphere, which can change multiple times in a text, just as a text might include several different settings.
It is important to spend some time considering the setting of any text you study. The world in which the characters live impacts the decisions which they make over the course of the plot.
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The effect of political or social events on characters can usually be seen in their reported thoughts, behaviour and dialogue.
While John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men is rooted in a very specific time and place, Steinbeck aimed to remove features which would closely identify the story with a set of political developments. This creates the impression that the social conditions which rule the lives of the characters are somehow beyond time, existing long before the events of the novel take place, and showing no signs of a foreseeable end. Why might Steinbeck have wanted to dissociate his text from historical specificity in this way?
Geographical setting can include country or region, environment, the buildings or landscapes where events occur, and even the weather. Do all the events occur in the same place? Do characters travel, or arrive from elsewhere? How does the interaction of characters with their environment create meaning in the text?
It can also be useful to compare the time a text is set with when it was written. Do these times differ? Find out why an author might choose to set a text in the past, present or future. Does this change our understanding of the story?
Answer the questions below on setting in Of Mice and Men.
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1.
|
Of Mice and Men is set in which country? |
|
[ ] |
Mexico |
[ ] |
Ireland |
[ ] |
Australia |
[ ] |
USA |
|
|
2.
|
The events in the novel take place near Soledad. What is the meaning of this name? |
|
[ ] |
Soldier |
[ ] |
Solitude |
[ ] |
Solvent |
[ ] |
Solicitous |
|
|
3.
|
When is the novel set? |
|
[ ] |
1890s |
[ ] |
1910s |
[ ] |
1930s |
[ ] |
1950s |
|
|
4.
|
Where does the novel open? |
|
[ ] |
In the bunkhouse |
[ ] |
In Soledad |
[ ] |
By a pool in the Salinas River valley |
[ ] |
In Weed |
|
|
5.
|
The events on the ranch take place where? |
|
[ ] |
The bunkhouse |
[ ] |
The barn |
[ ] |
The harness room |
[ ] |
All of the above |
|
|
6.
|
Which one of the following is NOT represented by the ranch of Lennie's and George's dreams? |
|
[ ] |
Self-reliance |
[ ] |
Freedom from work |
[ ] |
Plenty |
[ ] |
Comfort |
|
|
7.
|
After Lennie kills Curley's wife, the barn is described as very still, and the light very "soft". What is the effect of this description? |
|
[ ] |
Life appears to pause for a moment in the face of death |
[ ] |
It emphasises how the lives of everyone on the ranch will improve after Curley's wife's death |
[ ] |
It emphasises the barn as a place of refuge for the men |
[ ] |
It reminds the reader that the barn is a pleasant, homey place |
|
|
8.
|
The bunkhouse is the only place where the men are able to take some refuge on the ranch. What effect do Curley and his wife have on this environment? |
|
[ ] |
They disrupt and disturb |
[ ] |
They bring entertainment |
[ ] |
They create jealousies amongst the men |
[ ] |
All of the above |
|
|
9.
|
In the final chapter of the novel, we find the following description of the green pool along the Salinas River: "A far rush of wind sounded and a gust drove through the tops of the trees like a wave. The sycamore leaves turned up their silver sides, the brown, dry leaves on the ground scudded a few feet. And row on row of tiny wind waves flowed up the pool's green surface. As quickly as it had come, the wind died, and the clearing was quiet again." What is significant about the wind in this passage? |
|
[ ] |
It serves merely to attract attention to the stillness of the heron waiting to devour snakes |
[ ] |
Its disruption of the deceptively peaceful environment foreshadows the dramatic events about to take place in this setting |
[ ] |
It signifies the coming of spring and a rebirth for George |
[ ] |
The wind is a realistic detail and is not significant in itself |
|
|
10.
|
In the same passage, what might the dying of the wind represent? Choose the best answer. |
|
[ ] |
Lennie's calm trust in George |
[ ] |
Curley's determined pursuit of Lennie |
[ ] |
Slim's reassurance to George that he has taken the best action |
[ ] |
The speed with which life will appear to return to normal after the death of Lennie |
|
|
1.
|
Of Mice and Men is set in which country? |
|
[ ] |
Mexico |
[ ] |
Ireland |
[ ] |
Australia |
[x] |
USA |
|
|
2.
|
The events in the novel take place near Soledad. What is the meaning of this name? |
|
[ ] |
Soldier |
[x] |
Solitude |
[ ] |
Solvent |
[ ] |
Solicitous |
|
|
3.
|
When is the novel set? |
|
[ ] |
1890s |
[ ] |
1910s |
[x] |
1930s |
[ ] |
1950s |
|
|
4.
|
Where does the novel open? |
|
[ ] |
In the bunkhouse |
[ ] |
In Soledad |
[x] |
By a pool in the Salinas River valley |
[ ] |
In Weed |
|
|
5.
|
The events on the ranch take place where? |
|
[ ] |
The bunkhouse |
[ ] |
The barn |
[ ] |
The harness room |
[x] |
All of the above |
|
|
6.
|
Which one of the following is NOT represented by the ranch of Lennie's and George's dreams? |
|
[ ] |
Self-reliance |
[x] |
Freedom from work |
[ ] |
Plenty |
[ ] |
Comfort |
|
|
7.
|
After Lennie kills Curley's wife, the barn is described as very still, and the light very "soft". What is the effect of this description? |
|
[x] |
Life appears to pause for a moment in the face of death |
[ ] |
It emphasises how the lives of everyone on the ranch will improve after Curley's wife's death |
[ ] |
It emphasises the barn as a place of refuge for the men |
[ ] |
It reminds the reader that the barn is a pleasant, homey place |
|
|
8.
|
The bunkhouse is the only place where the men are able to take some refuge on the ranch. What effect do Curley and his wife have on this environment? |
|
[x] |
They disrupt and disturb |
[ ] |
They bring entertainment |
[ ] |
They create jealousies amongst the men |
[ ] |
All of the above |
|
|
9.
|
In the final chapter of the novel, we find the following description of the green pool along the Salinas River: "A far rush of wind sounded and a gust drove through the tops of the trees like a wave. The sycamore leaves turned up their silver sides, the brown, dry leaves on the ground scudded a few feet. And row on row of tiny wind waves flowed up the pool's green surface. As quickly as it had come, the wind died, and the clearing was quiet again." What is significant about the wind in this passage? |
|
[ ] |
It serves merely to attract attention to the stillness of the heron waiting to devour snakes |
[x] |
Its disruption of the deceptively peaceful environment foreshadows the dramatic events about to take place in this setting |
[ ] |
It signifies the coming of spring and a rebirth for George |
[ ] |
The wind is a realistic detail and is not significant in itself |
|
|
10.
|
In the same passage, what might the dying of the wind represent? Choose the best answer. |
|
[ ] |
Lennie's calm trust in George |
[ ] |
Curley's determined pursuit of Lennie |
[ ] |
Slim's reassurance to George that he has taken the best action |
[x] |
The speed with which life will appear to return to normal after the death of Lennie |
|
|