He wants to emphasize that it is based on Lennie’s actions, therefore it was just how he thinks or reacts to how soft things appear to him and his actions.Steinbeck characterizes the effect that Lennie had on these similar features by using a simile to compare how Lennie can do something to one article of clothing that he applies to it to how an animal looks in comparison. It shows how Lennie will do anything to touch an appealing feel of whatever falls within his peripheral vision. How Lennie copes up and understand surroundings around him is what makes society unfairly label Lennie as a monster, therefore to himself and people around him don't see how special he is through how they look at him but even through changes in his everyday life. People don't see how his thoughts and actions can be, so unclear to what is being done that states a mental disability taking place. In Monsters, the author, Myers puts forth and supports the same idea. The quote that explains this is based on the protagonist, Steve Harmon. Steve is …show more content…
Society all finds a way to unfairly label people to monsters based on these qualities because society will be the ones to create who becomes a monster. Judgement comes into play when people become monsters, that it is proven that though these quotes that actions and differential qualities make a change in making monsters. People are unfairly labeled as we can see because Lennie is mentally ill, while Steve and the “protagonist” from Born of A Man and A Woman are monsters based on their appearance and reactions to people around them. Society makes up the ability to label people as monsters because through the past and now, monsters act to be unfair because of racial,segregation, a blind spot, actions, and appearances that are associated with