Thursday, November 14, 2019
To What Extent Does Salinger Make You Sympathize With Holden Caulfield
To What Extent Does Salinger Make You Sympathize With Holden Caulfield    The Catcher In The Rye By J.D.Salinger    J.D Salinger has made the main character and narrator, Holden  Caulfield, very complex. He has many good qualities that help the  reader to sympathize with him. However throughout the novel the reader  comes to realize that Holdenââ¬â¢s behaviour around other characters often  contradicts the opinions he has expressed to t he reader. This makes  us see that, at times, Holden is no better than the characters he  dislikes. It makes him seem ââ¬Å"phoney.â⬠ However his use of colloquial  language helps the reader to realize that Holden is still quite young  and has a childish and immature view of life.    You can see how immature he is because even though he is sixteen he  still made a snowball and tried to get on a bus without realizing that  the bus driver would make him throw it out.    ââ¬Å"The snow was very good for packing. I didnââ¬â¢t throw it at anything,â⬠    Holden then complains,    ââ¬Å"But he wouldnââ¬â¢t believe me. People never believe you.â⬠    This is a very childish thing to say, if he doesnââ¬â¢t get his own way then Holden believes that itââ¬â¢s the other personââ¬â¢s fault. He never considers that the bus driver is just doing his job or that eventually the snowball would melt on the bus creating more work for the bus driver who would probably have to clean it up. He instead immediately assumes that everyone is biased against him instead of maturely just accepting that you have to follow the rules and you canââ¬â¢t just create your own. Holden is disillusioned and sees everyone as being cynical and believes that everything is either black or white; Holden Caulfield sees childhood as being ideal and he thinks adulthood is filled with corrupt p...              ...the windows on the station wagon.â⬠    Stradlater seems to make these repressed emotions resurface by  insulting Holden through his lack of respect for Jane and the hard  work Holden had just put into writing that essay for him.    I think that Salinger is mainly successful in his attempt to make the  reader sympathize with Holden. Although at the beginning of the book  Holden appears to be fake and uncaring towards several of the other  characters, as the book progresses the reader is shown how he has been  through the tragic loss of his brother and suppresses any emotions he  had about him, and how Holden really wants to fit in with the ââ¬Å"Adult  worldâ⬠ even if some of the things he is doing he disagrees with.  Holden is just a normal person with flaws like anyone else, the  difference is that Holden can admit his faults and doesnââ¬â¢t judge  others immediately by theirs.                      
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