Next up is the ranch boss. The boss has a very small part in
the novel, at the start where he allows George and Lennie to work on the ranch,
despite being rather suspicious of them. This lack of importance is actually
quite significant as it appears to be a complaint by Steinbeck against how the
rich people (represented by the boss) do nothing to help those in a less
fortunate position and, once they have their wealth, do nothing more to earn it
and instead rely on the exploitation of those in a less fortunate position than
themselves to do all of the hard work as the rich will not get their hands
dirty. A prime example of this exploitation is present at the time at which the
novel is set. The novel is set during the Great Depression in America, where
the normal people cannot find work easily. As a result, the entrepreneurs
exploited those that were struggling to find a job by making them work for a
pitiful wage, such as the construction of the Hoover Dam, where the
exploitation of the workers was obvious. Any worker that died was to be left
there rather than buried as this would take up valuable construction time. The
lorries carrying the construction materials were also ordered to reverse down
the narrow, winding road to the site as turning around at the top was deemed to
take 'too long'. As a result, the truck drivers developed the habit of
reversing with the door open so that they could jump out to (relative) safety
should the truck fall down the sheer slope at the edge of the road. This is a
clear example of the exploitation of the workers by their rich bosses.
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