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- The theme that the world has an outward appearance that seems fair and perfect but really they're
- as Holden put it "phonies." This is shown countless amount of times in his journey through New
- York and even before he left. The setting is in the 1950's; so I'm pretty sure that he didn't encounter
- any transvestites, lesbians, or anything that extreme of phoniest. Or on the other hand he could have
- liked them for being as Elmemson said a "none conformist." But I doubt it, he seemed to like kids
- more than anything. And his job, as he felt, was to protect them in their innocents; of which I will
- talk about in my second theme.
-
- The first example that stands out in my mind is the scene with Stradlater in the "can." If you
- remember Stradlater was getting ready for his other date while Holden watched him. "Stradlater
- was a secret slob" in public he always looked good and got all the girls but in fact he was a slob. His
- razor that made him look so good was "rusty as hell and full on lather and hair and crap." This
- proves that he is a slob to "never clean it or anything." If you think about it that's even worst than
- Old Ackley. At least Ackley knew that he had a problem, that he need to do something about his
- face; but Stradlater thought that he was a great guy. He actually thought that there was nothing
- wrong with never washing his razor. I think that what mad, Holden so made Stradlater was
- perpetrating in other word being "phony" every time he went out all GQ after using that filthy razor.
-
- Another instance is when he calls that girl in New York, Faith Cavendish, that Eddie Birdsell had
- brought to a dance at Princeton. Anyway he called her and she almost went off until Holden
- drooped Eddie's name. Then all of a sudden "she was getting friendly as hell." The same person said
- "if you think I enjoy bein' woke up in the middle-" was "getting an english accent all of a sudden." I
- think Holden caught her with her faτade down. When she first picked up the phone she was mad as
- anybody else would be in her shoes. But as soon as she processed "Eddie Birdsell from Princeton"
- she became so amicable. She most of thought that a friend of Eddie, from Princeton, most have
- been rich or at lest well off. Faith was all ready to hook up with him for a date until she asked
- "Where ya callin' from? Where ya at now, anyways?" And "in a phone booth" was the wrong
- answer. When he said that she new he had no money and from that point on she had no time to
- meet up any more. This is a good example of the phoniest that Holden will talk about all through
- book.
-
- Oh and one I almost missed it is a little before the conversation with Faith it is a very important
- event. When J.D. Salinger had Holden look about of the window I think it was a big simile, of which
- I think about more in theme number 3, of the theme of the book. I'm sure Holden didn't ride all the
- way to New York to pick a run down hotel. So I take it when he drove up it probably looked good
- on the outside. He even "took it off [referring to the red hunting hat] before I checked inI didn't want
- to look like a screwball or something." So we can assume it was nice, or at lest on the outside.
- Salinger even throw Holden foreshadowed a little in the line "I didn't know then that the goddam
- hotel was full of perverts and morons." The first guy he saw out his room window "took out all these
- women's clothes, and put them on." Then he started walking around like a women, smoking a
- cigarette, and looking in the mirror. And now I guest I have to take back my sentence about
- transvestites in the opening paragraph. Second he saw a couple squiring water and "they were in
- hysterics the whole time," a little strange. You see the outside of the hotel represents what society is
- or tries to be, all nice and neat. And the people acting silly in the rooms are what we a really like. Im
- not saying we are all perverts but we all have two different personalities; one outside and one inside
- closed doors.
-
- Since I'm will into the second page and it's past my bed time or at lest it feels like it is this is the last
- one for this theme. The one I had in mind is the one the date he had with Sally. From the jump she
- was phony. Holden had already talked to her dad and told him how it was, but she still asked how it
- was. Holden when call her "quite a little phony," she even sounded phony through the book with
- lines like "I'd love to grand." And when they got through with the play on the Lunts it didn't get any
- better. They ran into this guy that Sally knew and both of their phoniest began to shine. "You've
- though that they hadn't seen each other for twenty years" they probably even hugged and kissed
- checks and all. And the funny thing is that "they probably met each other only once." And from that
- point on they went on a quest to outname the other. "They both kept thinking of places as fast as
- they could" trying to get the upper-hand in a game of illusion. They both were trying to, I guest,
- show they are more popular than the other by making it seem like they known all these places and
- people, when in actuality they were two big phonies.
-
- The next Theme of this story that I want to talk about is the significance of the novel's title. First of
- all I have to say why the book was entitle as it was "The Catcher in the Rye." The title of the book is
- a mystery all the way until chapter 21 when he sneaked back home to see Phoebe. When Phoebe
- fronted him about getting kicked out of school again saying "you don't like anything" Holden was
- forced to come up with something he would enjoy to be or do. After minutes of pondering Holden
- said "I'd just be the catcher in the rye and all." He just wanted to save the little innocent kids from
- falling. The kids I think represent the innocents of the young just playing and when they fall off the
- cliff they discover the world. He wants to protect them and keep them pure will. All through the
- story Salinger used Holden as the catcher on the rye to protect or try to protect the innocents of
- kids.
-
- The biggest and most memorial of this protection is when he went to Phoebe elementary school to
- talk to her before he had to leave. Anyway he saw the word fuck you on the hall walls and "it drove
- him dam near crazy." He couldn't stand the idea that Phoebe or her friend had seen that on the wall.
- If they saw it they would wonder and eventually "some dirty kid would tell them" and they would
- know the cruel the world thus falling in the rye. As his duty as the catcher in the rye Holden tried to
- erase the first one that was on the walls, but later said "it's hopeless anyway. If you had a million
- years to do it in, you couldn't rub out even half the fuck you signs in the world. Its impossible." Now
- I think the word tragedy goes right there. If the job that Holden is set out to do is inevitable then it's
- a tragedy. Salinger illustrates a full blown tragedy with a 15 year old boy; it sounds a lot like the
- classic we read last year Romeo and Juliet. A young boy, even the same age, is placed in a no win
- situation.
-
- The next one I just thought about is the time Holden got a snow ball off the window cell. This has
- nothing to go with protecting but it is about purity. Holden got some show from off the window pan
- and he "started to throw it" but after looking out at the scene he decides not to. He said he stared it
- throw it at a car and fire hydrogen but they looked "too nice and white." Holden is consumed with
- finding and protecting purity, and when he found something pure he didn"t want to disturb it. But it's
- strange how he used the words "nice and white," I know that the snow was white but is there
- something more there. White is often associated with pure and even holiness. He may be comparing
- it to a holy site; because he does ask Ackley about joining later in the book. You never know.
-
- Theme number three is going to be a discussing about Salinger and his symbolism. Salinger is a
- master of the subtle symbolism. He lays his symbols so subtle that most of the time they're not even
- found or addressed even by a commentary over the book. I really enjoyed reading and rereading
- this book to find embedding symbols. I think that's what made it so good.
-
- A very important character that is referred to all throgh the story by Holden is Allie. Allie is Holder's
- younger brother who died of leukemia when he was just thirteen. Holden loved his brother more
- than anything and when he died he punched out all the windows in the garage. He said that "my
- hand still hurts me once in a while." This is symbolic of the love he had and still has for his little
- brother; he even quotes latter that "you don't stop loving someone because they die" proving that he
- still cares for him. He may even think he had something to do with his death or he caused it.
- Sometimes little kids think stuff like that. Holden also says that " I can't make a real fist any
- more-not a tight one." If his fist represents his love for his brother or his heart than maybe he can't
- love again. When he meet up with Sally he said he felt like marring her than he discards it by saying
- "I don't even like her much." Holden is afraid to love again because of the way his heart and fist was
- broken by Allie.
-
- Another symbol is his own sister Phoebe. First you must understand that Phoebe came from the
- Greek word meaning Sun. Holden is lost in the world and feels that everything is "phony." Phoebe is
- his symbol of hope in the world. All Holden needs is hope. Just as the sun comes out and shines it's
- beautiful color and truth to the world to nurrshish and feed the plant; so did Phoebe come with her
- innocent hands saving Holden from the world. "The first thing I did when I got off at Penn station, I
- went into this phone booth." Holden first started to call his brother but then he thought of his sitter
- Phoebe, then he whet on about her and how she wouldn't mind being woke up. All through the
- book he will think about call and eventually sneak home just to see her. This shows he sees her as
- his only light in this world of phonies hint the name Phoebe Greek for sun.
-
- I read a very interesting point in a book review about The Catcher in the Rye that explains the
- Holden behavior all through the book. In short it said his activities "describes a developing nervous
- breakdown." And if you think of the symptoms you would a agree. Unexplained depression, show
- countless time in the story as "I felt depressed as hell." And the why that Salinger keep using the
- world depressed, not bad or mellow but depressed he may have been hinting at it. Impulsive
- spending, that is obvious through the fact he only had "3 dollars and some change" after just 2 days
- in New York. Erratic behavior, example is Holden just jumping up and put Stradlater in a "half
- Nelson." All of this is prior to his eventual nervous collapse.
-
- This book has been a joy to read. Holden was very funny at times especially when he called Sally to
- ask her about "trim a tree" for Christmas. Salinger is ether a great writer or he just lucked up this
- good of a story. Sometimes I wonder if the author of books always think as deep as the reader. I
- mean do authors read a commentary over a book they wrote and say, hmm I didn't think of that.
- Writers like Edgar Allen are obvious that they have a deeper meaning. But with Salinger it's hard to
- tell if this is a simple story of a boy rebelling or is it a great big metaphor for the world and how we
- are. Now if you ask him I,m sure he would say "oh that's what meant exactly," and he might as well
- have meant that; but who is to say.