The Catcher In The Rye by J.D. Salinger

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Presentation transcript:

The Catcher In The Rye by J.D. Salinger Four days in the life of seventeen-year-old Holden Caulfield, in his own remarkable voice, as he kills time in New York City to avoid telling his parents he’s been kicked out of school again. His encounters with friends, teachers and strangers gradually reveal his undiminished grief for a lost brother, and his attempts to rediscover meaning in the world. Holden’s fresh, witty voice is the number one reason to read The Catcher in Rye, nearly 60 years after its initial publication. In a culture where someone can become a celebrity, however briefly, by being the most obnoxious voice in the room, Holden’s sharp, original take on adult convention and his mania for exposing phoniness wherever he finds it still resonate.

Characters Holden: Think of his name. Holden -"Holdin' " What could he be holding on to? D. B.: "Now he's out in Hollywood, D. B., being a prostitute (p.2)." No, he is not selling sex for money. Holden does not mean it literally, but figuratively. D. B. is a man with talent who could write wonderful short stories that Holden admired like "The Secret Goldfish" in the book of stories titled The Secret Goldfish. But now D. B. has traded in his talent for story telling to write for the movies in Hollywood which Holden considers an inferior art form. What is D. B.'s motive for using his talent for writing for the movies? It is money. Holden believes D. B. is selling himself.

Characters Allie:Allie is Holden's little brother who died of leukemia. Holden writes about Allie's baseball glove and all of the the other sweet, genuine things Allie did. Allie is a key character and a foil for D. B. Allie will never become a phony. Allie will never sell out. Phoebe: So, if D. B. is the sibling who sold out, and Allie is the brother who will never sell out, who is or what concept is Phoebe supposed to be? As long as you are thinking about it, who is Holden supposed to be? Phoebe is the only member of the family that does not abandon or leave Holden in some way. Allie died, D. B. left for California where he abandoned his ideals, and Holden's parents send him away all the time.

Symbolism Holden's Red Hunting Hat The first time we read The Catcher in the Rye, we noticed that this red hat kept cropping up, but actually, we didn't really know what to do with it. At first it just seemed a little ridiculous. After all, Holden just berated Mr. Spencer for being the kind of old guy that "can get a big bang out of buying a [Navajo] blanket," and here he is a few chapters later admitting that he himself gets "a big bang out of that hat." At least on this level, the hat hints that Holden has the same characteristics he judges in others. But at this point, that's not really news to us. There's definitely more hidden in this hat. Then we had to look at certain specific key passages, starting with the first time we see the hat. Holden tells us (towards the beginning of Chapter Three) that he bought the hat in New York that morning after he left all the fencing equipment on the subway and pissed off the entire team. So we know he's feeling particularly vulnerable at the time, though Holden would never admit to such a state as vulnerability.

The Hat Take a look at when Holden wears the hat, and when he doesn't. He puts the hat on at important moments – writing the composition about Allie's baseball mitt, staring at himself in the mirror and pretending to be tough after Stradlater punches him, yelling "Sleep tight, ya morons" down the corridor, etc. He takes it off when he's on the train, going to a bar, in hotel lobbies, and so forth. So while he's all about the hat in private, he's embarrassed or lacking confidence to wear it in public. We even get hints to this at the start of Chapter Thirteen ("I took my red hunting hat […] and put it on – I didn't give a damn how I looked"), the end of Chapter Sixteen ("I took my old hunting hat out […] and put it on. I knew I wouldn't meet anybody that knew me"), and the start of Chapter Twenty-One ("I'd already taken off my hunting hat, so as not to look suspicious"). But despite his embarrassment, the hunting hat becomes an important part of the way Holden sees himself. He admits it's "corny," but he personally "like[s] how it look[s]." It's a people shooting hat, he declares. When he's wearing it, he can be as insular and tough and as unique as he wants. That's why it's such a big deal when Phoebe puts it on his head at the end of the novel; not only is she giving back to Holden, but she's demonstrating that she loves him as the individual that he is – corny red hunting hat and all.