Wednesday, May 29, 2019
ââ¬ÅThatââ¬â¢s Lifeââ¬Â An Analysis of Holden Caulfield Essay --
The Catcher in the Rye by J.D.Salinger supersedes the norm by staying painfully in the deepest part of the average, for it contains topics that people can reach to (such as, cynicism, nostalgia, and bitterness of life). One of the grand topics the novel discusses is an item-by-items identity, and how Holden Caulfields identity is shaped through the adversity he faces. Quentin Crisp once said The young always cook the same problem -- how to rebel and conform at the same time. They have now solved this by defying their parents and copying one another. Holdens desire to be an individual (a rebel without a cause), hatred of phoniness, and guilt over Allies death creates a substantial conflict. Conformity can be defined in some ways, depending on the person and their situation. In Holdens case conformity is the choice to grow up and move on from childish antics. Holden, however, chooses to be wedged between a world of a childs innocence and the complex world of adulthood. He d eities his two younger siblings, Allie and Phoebe, as if the were contenders for sainthood because of ...
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