Throughout our lives, all human beings are forced to navigate from the world of our carefree simplistic childhoods to the more terrifying complex world of adulthood. For most people, this journey is fearsome and full of struggles and obstacles that they must overcome in order to venture to the other side. No matter how difficult this journey is, growing up and becoming an adult is necessary for our life experience. In the novel The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger, the main character Holden Caulfield struggles with the concept of becoming an adult and leaving his childhood behind. Like most people, Holden tries to find an outlet for releasing his fears about growing up.…
The protagonist of the novel The Catcher in the Rye is Holden Caulfield. The entire novel is based on a short period of Holden’s life which he is describing to a psychotherapist. Throughout the novel we get the idea that Holden, is not living up to his potential, is angry at society, and is looking for love. The protagonist of the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, Janie, shares many traits with Holden. Janie is an african american women, who is abandoned by her family, and left to be raised by her grandmother.…
Jane Gallagher is the only girl that truly capture Holden’s heart and he think about her every once in awhile. Holden even goes out of his way to call her a few times from a payphone booth as he wander through the city of New York. Holden hold a huge spot for Jane in his heart,…
Holden struggles with embodying the idea of love, demonstrates that he didn’t have a caring environment growing up so when people did try to love him he didn't welcome it and pushed them away. So on the rare occasion when Holden did show some sort of affection it ended up disastrous for him. “I don’t feel very much like myself. I’ll pay you and all, but do you mind very much if we don’t do it?{...}He snapped his finger very hard on my pajamas.…
Throughout The Catcher in the Rye, written by J.D. Salinger, we see the narrator, Holden Caulfield, sink deeper and deeper into his mental instability. This began when Holden lost his brother, and went on as he started his adventure, fearing he would lose the rest of his family as well. Though this causes him not to be a very reliable source, it does make him more relatable to the book’s teenage audience. In your teenage years, you begin to question not only yourself, but the world around you, which can be seen through Holden's constant hypocrisy, angst, and overall sense of rebellion throughout the novel. The Catcher in the Rye has made itself very well known for a multitude of reasons.…
“What lasts is what is written. We look to literature to find the essence of an age.” This is a statement by Peter Brodie. It is basically stating that we can see how the past was by what is written. I do agree with this statement, for years now literature has been able to give us clues from the past.…
J.D. Salinger wrote and released “The Catcher In The Rye” in July 16, 1951. The story is about a young boy who had many problems, especially the fear of change and growing up. Holden Caulfield is a 16 year old boy who has been expelled from school four times. Salinger uses symbolism to show Holden’s thoughts and feelings and to describe his personality too. Salinger does this because Holden is not mature enough to see these things for himself.…
Holden’s parents couldn’t give their son the help he needed in a time he was most innocent and exposed. The Catcher in the Rye shows how a life so young can be shaped and abused by unfortunate events. Without the right support group and treatment, a young soul can be misguided and left off to understand growing up merely by themselves. The world can always be too much for everyone. Holden Caulfield was just getting used to…
This based on the idea of Holden being the “Catcher in the Rye”. Holden is described as “the protector and savior of innocence”. But Baumbach notes that Holden is still a child running through the rye and he has no one to catch him. To become the catcher, Holden must mature and leave childhood behind him. Salinger uses Holden’s distaste towards the corruption of adulthood (using words like “phony”) as a revelation of Holden resisting growing up.…
The Catcher in the Rye is a story about a teenage boy named Holden Caulfield and has many themes. Some of them include insanity, phoniness, childhood, and sex. Throughout the story Holden criticizes people and labels them “phonies”. Ironically, in The Catcher in the Rye, Holden acts phony in many ways which one can see through his thoughts, words and actions. Because of this Holden cannot have functioning relationships with others, and it take a toll on him.…
Holden from Catcher in the Rye is a kid that is alienated from the community and the book tells the story of his three days in New York when he fails his school (again). He meets with a lot of people and the reader sees his reactions and…
The author Salinger, makes Holden Caulfield this obnoxious, bad mouthing, cynic teenager. “...I left Elkton Hills was because I was surrounded by phonies.” (Salinger p 13). In the novel Catcher in the Rye, Holden goes through many obstacles and is trying to find himself. But during his exploration,we realize that Holden is growing up and is becoming a man.…
The fear of change is very common among people all over the world. In the novel The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger, Holden is subject to an abundance of changes that he fears, which eventually causes him to realize that change is needed in some parts of his life in order to become more mature and to adapt to his surroundings. Holden´s fear of adulthood is one of his biggest fears throughout the course of the novel. When Holden first takes a taxi cab when he gets off the train station in New York, he becomes very curious and wonders ¨where the ducks went when the lagoon got all icy and frozen over,¨ (Salinger 16). When Holden asks the cab driver about where the ducks go in the winter, he is relating the question to his own life.…
In the novel The Catcher in the Rye authored by J.D. Salinger, the protagonist, Holden Caulfield, is a teenager who refuses to accept that he is becoming an adult. Holden is obsessed about being a child and refuses to stop horsing around. He chooses to place himself between the world of simple innocence and complex adulthood. Holden is the narrator and he chooses to tell the story in his own contradicting manner. Holden controls his experiences and his narrations of the same are distorted from reality.…
In J.D Salinger’s, Catcher in the Rye, Holden Caufield is unwilling to resist change and is opposed of watching innocent children lose their innocence. This expresses the theme, the painfulness of growing up and phoniness of the adult world. Holden hates the phony adult world, so he wants to save every child from stepping into it. Therefore, Holden expresses his feelings to Phoebe that he wants to be the Catcher in the Rye. Holden says, “I keep picturing all these little kids….…