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- English
- A Comparison Of The Catcher In The Rye And The Adventures of Huck Finn
-
- by Keith Eich
- keith@neonet.net
- http://www.neonet.net/keith
-
- There are a bunch of gramatical errors, but the paper got an A..
-
- The forthcoming of American literature proposes two distinct
- Realistic novels portraying characters which are tested with a plethora
- of adventures. In this essay, two great American novels are compared:
- The Adventures of Huck Finn by Mark Twain and The Catcher In The Rye by
- J.D. Salinger. The Adventures of Huck Finn is a novel based on the
- adventures of a boy named Huck Finn, who along with a slave, Jim, make
- their way along the Mississippi River during the Nineteenth Century.
- The Catcher In The Rye is a novel about a young man called Holden
- Caulfield, who travels from Pencey Prep to New York City struggling with
- his own neurotic problems. These two novels can be compared using the
- Cosmogonic Cycle with both literal and symbolic interpretations.
- The Cosmogonic Cycle is a name for a universal and archetypal
- situation. There are six parts that make up the cycle: the call to
- adventure, the threshold crossing, the road of trials, the supreme test,
- a flight or a flee, and finally a return. There are more parts they do
- not necessarily fall into the same order, examples of these are symbolic
- death and motifs. The Cosmogonic Cycle is an interesting way to
- interpret literature because is Universal or correlates with any time
- period and any situation.
- The Call to Adventure is the first of the Cosmogonic Cycle. It is
- the actual "call to adventure" that one receives to begin the cycle.
- There are many ways that this is found in literature including going by
- desire, by chance, by abduction, and by being lured by an outside
- force. In The Adventures of Huck Finn, Huck is forced with the dilemma
- of whether to stay with his father and continue to be abused or to
- leave. Huck goes because he desires to begin his journey. In The
- Catcher In The Rye, Holden mentally is torn between experience and
- innocence, it would seem to him that an outside force is luring him to
- do something but in actuality he is beginning his journey because of his
- desire. The Call to Adventure is the first step in the Cosmogonic
- Cycle, it is the step at which the character or hero is brought into
- cycle.
- The Threshold Crossing is the second step, it is the place or the
- person that which the character crosses over or through into the Zone
- Unknown. The Zone Unknown being the place where the journey takes
- place. The threshold crossing is often associated with a character
- change or an appearance change. An example of this is in The Wizard of
- Oz, when the movie goes from black and white to color, showing a visual
- symbolic death. A symbolic death is another part to the Cosmogonic
- Cycle of which the character goes through a change and emerges a more
- complete person or more experienced. In The Adventures of Huck Finn, a
- symbolic death is very apparent during the scene in which Huck sets up
- his fatherÆs cabin to look like Huck was brutally murder. Huck emerges
- as a runway child and now must be careful of what he does, so that he
- does not get caught. Huck also tells people false aliases for himself
- so that no one knows his true identity. Every time that he does this he
- is symbolically dying and reemerges a more experienced person. In The
- Catcher In The Rye, Holden also uses fake names, but Holden symbolically
- dies through fainting, changing the position of his red hunting hat, and
- is associated with bathrooms. The bathroom motif, or the reoccurring
- appearance of a bathroom, symbolizes death for Holden because he enters
- bathrooms with a neurotic and pragmatic frame of mind and exits with a
- cleared mind. The use of symbolic death and motifs is associated with
- the Threshold Crossing, the second step of the Cosmogonic Cycle.
- The Road of Trials is the next step in the Cosmogonic Cycle, which
- are the obstacles which the character faces throughout the literary
- work. In The Adventures of Huck Finn, HuckÆs Road of Trials occurs on
- the Mississippi River. He faces many obstacles, including moral
- decisions of right and wrong, dealing with con-artists, and helping a
- runaway slave. He promulgates more experienced from his journey down
- the river on his raft. In The Catcher In The Rye, HoldenÆs Road of
- Trials takes from Pencey Prep to New York City. Holden deals with his
- own mental hallucinations, cognative disotience, and his desire to stay
- innocence, his Peter Pan complex. The author does not end the novel
- with a happy ending, from analyzing HoldenÆs experiences we can assume
- he emerges a more complete and understanding person once he came to the
- realization. The road of trials is the third step of the Cosmogonic
- cycle in which the character or hero faces hardships or endeavors and
- becomes more complete and experienced.
- The Supreme Test or the Ultimate Test, is the forth step of the
- Cosmogonic Cycle where the character or hero is faced with a dilemma of
- enormous proportions, often found in the Zone of Magnified Power. The
- Zone of Magnified Power is found within the Zone Unknown but is a place
- which has mystical and mysterious powers, such as the Emerald City in
- The Wizard of Oz. Huck is faced with the moral predicament of slavery
- throughout the entire novel. This test or question continues to arise
- many times throughout the novel. Huck is torn between right and wrong,
- in fact he almost turns Jim, the runaway slave, in during his quest on
- the river. In the end, Jim is captured and Huck decides to free Jim by
- breaking him out of the confinement. In a sense Huck accomplishes his
- Supreme Test by doing what he feels is morally right. On the other
- hand, HoldenÆs Supreme Test is to accept growing up. He does not want
- to grow up but takes in experience. The novel shows his dilemma through
- the glass motif, the reoccurring presence of glass, glass being the
- symbol through which one stops watching through and experiences. He
- consistently tries to erase the "fùk yous" written everywhere and comes
- to a realization when he canÆt erase one because it is out of his reach
- and behind the "glass." The glass motif also appears when his brother,
- Allie, dies. When he is in the garage, he breaks the "glass" garage
- door windows, essentially trying to escape his anger. The consequence
- is that he ends up more confused than before even though he now has a
- realization. The Supreme Test is often the high point of a literary
- work and the character or hero usually receives some kind of reward
- after being successful.
- The fifth and sixth parts of the Cosmogonic Cycle, the flight or
- flee and the return, can be combined into one instance. After the
- character completes his obstacles and Supreme Test, he is allowed to
- return to reality, the real world. Huck and Holden are both social
- misfits and want to escape civilization. Huck chooses to leave and
- "light out for the new territory." On the other hand, Holden has nowhere
- to "light out" to, because the Twentieth Century America has no new
- territory, consequently he is placed in a mental institute. The return
- home is the reinstitution to reality as a more experienced and whole
- person.
- William Wordsworth emphasizes in his "Ode to Intimations of
- Immortality From Recollections of Early Childhood," using the following
- lines:
- "Though nothing can bring back the hour
- Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower;
- We will grieve not, rather find
- Strength in what remains behind;"
- That we must put our idealistic picture of the world behind us and must
- look at the world behind us and must look at it in a more realistic
- plane. Children have an innocent perception of the world around them,
- but as adults we realize the world is not black or white but various
- colors. The Cosmogonic Cycle can be compared to the metamorphosis which
- a caterpillar goes through. The caterpillar starts out innocent (black
- and white) and goes through stages or obstacles to become a butterfly.
- The caterpillar emerges colorful as well as more complete and
- experienced.
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