The life lessons expressed in this story are not as direct as some life lessons, but when you put the pieces together, you can find a few life lessons here. A clear one is the life lesson of doing well in school. As Holden has explained he has been kicked out of every school he has attended. He is obviously disappointed in himself deep down, but he isn’t making the changes needed. The good reading experience can be…
Holden’s internal struggle to grow up. Holden’s life is comparable to the carousel because he lives in a never-ending cycle of youthfulness and immaturity. The carousel is a symbol of adolescence because “there [are] a few kids riding on it” showing that one has to get off the ride to reach a sense of responsibility and adulthood (210). The kids are able to ride the carousel with no worries and no sense of responsibility. Throughout his…
life has taken a very wrong turn. Salinger uses the internal and external man vs man, man vs. society, and man vs. self conflicts that Caufield handles throughout his journey to express the central idea that one experiences loneliness in all aspect of life, especially through growing up. One of Holden’s major conflicts is…
young man as he struggles with this idea of freedom. This is the story of when independence clashes with rules and our main character, Sammy, is put right in the middle of it. Making him decide whether to stay in his own world or break out into a new one. Showing that in this story, freedom is the most important and influential underlying theme. The setting to this story played an integral role in the events that transpired. The plot takes place in a grocery store where the main character,…
a cigarette box to be my shape of the poster, it is because I realized Holden always smokes in the story. I feel that cigarettes can help him express his feeling. It might not resolve his problems but at least it might make him feel relaxing and calm his emotion. On the cigarette box, I draw some ducks and a red hunting hat in the middle. The red hunting hat symbolizes his uniqueness and individuality. He is an outsider and tries to live differently from the phony people around him. He gets…
it's about a baseball glove?" "God damn it." He was sore as hell. He was really furious. "You always do everything backasswards." He looked at me. "No wonder you're flunking the hell out of here," he said. "You don't do one damn thing the way you're supposed to. I mean it. Not one damn thing." "All right, give it back to me, then," I said. I went over and pulled it right out of his goddam hand. Then I tore it up. "What the hellja do that for?" he said. I didn't even answer him. I just threw the…
The Catcher in The Rye is one of the most taught books in North America. Although, it has always been heavily critiqued, it still holds a special place in the hearts of many students. Ever since has been published in 1951, it is debated if The Catcher in The Rye deserves such standing as a common novel to be taught to high school students. In my opinion, this timeless piece by J.D Salinger deserves to be recognized and taught across the continent. First, the story is told using a writing…
Catcher in the Rye: Loneliness “It is in the more muddled moments of my life, that I become painfully aware of my issues. When nothing is going right, when life gets away from me. When I feel like life is living me, instead of me, living life. It’s a difficult place to be…” ~Jaeda Dewalt Holden has had a troubled life based on the fact that his little brother died, everyone around him is living a double life, and he struggled to find his life purpose. In the novel Catcher in the Rye Holden…
does not like it, he recognizes that each time he returns to the museum he is older and closer to adulthood. The museum is the one thing in Holden’s life that he can rely on to stay the same and he wishes that all aspects of life could be unchanging as well. He tells the reader, “Certain things they should stay the way they are. You ought to be able to just stick them in one of those big glass cases and just leave them alone” (122). The glass cases in the museum represent Holden’s desire to not…
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…. I know its crazy”…