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    Sally and Holden were friends when they were younger, and Holden and her spent time together, but Holden did not like her. One day when Holden was bored he called up Sally and once he hung up he said, “I wasn’t too crazy about her, but I’d known her for years” (Salinger 117). Displaying that he does not even like Sally but he still hangs out with her because he has no one else to talk to. When Holden was on a date with her, they went skating then got something to eat…

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    “Laughter is timeless, imagination has no age, and dreams are forever.” -Walt Disney, this is something that Walt Disney said it shows how no matter your age you can still have an imagination. Walter Elias Disney born on December 5th 1901 in Chicago,Illinois would grow up to be someone that changed pop culture forever. Walt had many ups and downs within his career getting criticized by everyone. From a young age Walt knew what hard work was, he had lived through the great depression. Walt…

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    approaching the adult world can implicate harm to themselves and others around them. In the novel, The Catcher In The Rye written by JD Salinger, Holden Caulfield narrates his own story and how he struggles with accepting the fact that change everyone must go through is imminent. On the second day he ran away, he decides to make plans to meet with Sally, a friend who he has known for a long time. On his way to his date, he passes a museum he visited as a child and with Allie. Seeing this…

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    Holden relates to people now in many ways, Catcher in the Rye still represents the voice of people modern day. Holden is independent throughout the book, he doesn't want help from anyone especially not his parents like most teens. Most can relate to Holden's loss of a family member and the struggle to overcome and mourn. Like a lot of people, Holden is always judging others and still cares about how people perceive him. Holden is always in private schools and he rarely sees his family. He…

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    The symbolic images connect to Holden’s desire throughout the novel to be the catcher in the rye. Holden interprets scene discrete to his imagination of falling. In the sequence of the events, in Chapter 16, the song that was sung by the little boy was misinterpreted from “If a body meet a body coming through the rye” to “If a body catch a body.” Therefore, a concept of an imagination of “all these little kids playing some game in this big field of rye and all” (p. 173) was created. His job was…

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    In The Catcher in the Rye, J.D. Salinger demonstrates his knowledge of adolescence through the following, “‘...I never care too much when I lose something…’” which suggests that the youth of America may have an overly carefree view on life and material items. Salinger cultivates this view through the character of Holden Caulfield, a young man with few interests and many pet peeves. He dislikes many activities which other people his age adore, including movies and football games. Furthermore, he…

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    but also of his brother and sister, who both share the same red hair. Holden states how his father wishes for him to attend an Ivy League college, and become a more typical version of success. Yet, Holden flouts this normative goal saying “I wouldn’t go to one of those Ivy League colleges, if I was dying”(85). He believes that attending one of those expensive schools filled primarily with carbon copies of the next student would be phony, an adjective which Holden avoids at all costs. Similar to…

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    Imagine feeling constantly ostracized and paranoid about being belittled during typical everyday encounters. In the case of teenager Holden Caulfield, this phobia of exclusion is the norm. Holden’s suspicions often end up disconnecting him further from the support of others. The Catcher in the Rye by: J.D. Salinger is about the social and internal struggles faced by Holden Caulfield. It all begins shortly after Holden is kicked out of Pencey Prep, a school in which he feels lonesome and…

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    Every person has a prized possession that reveals something significant about themselves. In the Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger, the protagonist, Holden Caulfield cherishes his red hunting hat. The reader’s first encounter the red hunting hat in chapter three where Holden describes how he got it in his hometown of New York City after losing his fencing foils. Salinger never clearly wrote in the story why Holden holds dear to it. However, there were several references in his novel about…

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    Every adult has experienced maturation that ended their childhood; for some people it’s early on, while for others it’s later in their life. For Holden Caulfield, maturation and coming of age occurs when he is 16 and he flunks out of his school. Holden Caulfield, protagonist of the story, “The Catcher In The Rye”, written by JD Salinger, experiences maturation and a transition from youth to adolescence. “The Catcher In The Rye” is a story centred around a teenage boy’s perception of the world…

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