exw280.txt 4.1 KB

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  1. The Catcher in the Rye
  2. In J.D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye, the first person
  3. narration is critical in helping the reader to know and understand
  4. the main character, Holden Caulfield. Holden, in his narration,
  5. relates a flashback of a significant period of his life, three days
  6. and nights on his own in New York City. Through his narration,
  7. Holden discloses to the reader his innermost thoughts and feelings.
  8. He thus provides the reader not only with information of what
  9. occurred, but also how he felt about what happened.
  10. Holden's thoughts and ideas reveal many of his character
  11. traits. One late Saturday night, four days before the beginning of
  12. school vacation, Holden is alone, bored and restless, wondering
  13. what to do. He decides to leave Pencey, his school, at once and
  14. travels to New York by train. He decides that, once in New York,
  15. he will stay in a cheap motel until Wednesday, when he is to return
  16. home. His plan shows the reader how very impetuous he is and how
  17. he acts on a whim. He is unrealistic, thinking that he has a
  18. foolproof plan, even though the extent of his plans are to take a
  19. room in a hotel.., and just take it easy till Wednesday.
  20. Holden's excessive thoughts on death are not typical of most
  21. adolescents. His near obsession with death might come from having
  22. experienced two deaths in his early life. He constantly dwells on
  23. Allie, his brother's, death. From Holden's thoughts, it is obvious
  24. that he loves and misses Allie. In order to hold on to his brother
  25. and to minimize the pain of his loss, Holden brings Allie's
  26. baseball mitt along with him where ever he goes. The mitt has
  27. additional meaning and significance for Holden because Allie had
  28. written poetry, which Holden reads, on the baseball mitt. Holden's
  29. preoccupation with death can be seen in his contemplation of a dead
  30. classmate, James Castle. It tells the reader something about
  31. Holden that he lends his turtleneck sweater to this classmate, with
  32. whom he is not at all close.
  33. Holden's feelings about people reveal more of his positive
  34. traits. He constantly calls people phonies, even his brother,
  35. D.B., who has sold out to Hollywood. Although insulting, his
  36. seemingly negative feelings show that Holden is a thinking and
  37. analyzing, outspoken individual who values honesty and sincerity.
  38. He is unimpressed with people who try to look good in other's eyes.
  39. Therefore, since it is obvious that Holden is bright, the reason
  40. for his flunking out of school would seem to be from a lack of
  41. interest.
  42. Holden has strong feelings of love towards children as
  43. evidenced through his caring for Phoebe, his little sister. He is
  44. protective of her, erasing bad words from the walls in her school
  45. and in a museum, in order that she not learn from the graffiti.
  46. His fondness for children can be inferred when he tells her that,
  47. at some time in the future, he wants to be the only grown-up with
  48. all these little kids playing some game in this big field of rye
  49. and all. He'll stand on the edge of a cliff and catch anybody who
  50. starts to fall off the edge of the cliff. He got this image from
  51. his misinterpretation of a line from the Robert Burns poem, if a
  52. body catch a body comin' through the rye.
  53. When situations are described, in person or in a book, they
  54. are influenced by the one who describes them, and by his or her
  55. perceptions and experiences. Through Holden's expressions of his
  56. thoughts and feelings, the reader sees a youth, sensitive to his
  57. surroundings, who chooses to deal with life in unique ways. Holden
  58. is candid, spontaneous, analytical, thoughtful, and sensitive, as
  59. evidenced by his narration. Like most adolescents, feelings about
  60. people and relationships are often on his mind. Unfortunately, in
  61. Holden's case, he seems to expect the worst, believing that the
  62. result of getting close to people is pain. Pain when others reject
  63. you or pain when they leave you, such as when a friend walks off or
  64. a beloved brother dies. It would not have been possible to feel
  65. Holden's feelings or understand his thoughts nearly as well had the
  66. book been written in third person.
  67. <br><br>
  68. Words: 712