Holden's Innocence essay topics

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  • Holden's True Love Children
    1,481 words
    Holden's True Love Children: spirited, loveable, cute, and something that a society could not live without. But when ones life is so rotated around children like JD Salinger's Catcher in the Rye character, Holden, one loses all conscious and can only find happiness when with children or thinking about them. Holden can only find genuine love in children, for they have not learned the dreadful prerequisite of life, "phoniness". He hates the artificiality that adults eventually acquire because all ...
  • Boy Holden
    2,123 words
    The novel The Catcher In The Rye, by J.D. Salinger, contains many complex symbols, many of the symbols in the book are interconnected. A symbol is an object represents an idea that is important to the novel. I believe the most important symbol in this novel is Holden's idea of being the "catcher in the rye". Holden Caulfield, the main character in the novel, is not the typical sixteen year old boy. Holden has many characteristics that aren't typical of anyone that I know. Holden is very afraid o...
  • Holden At The End Of The Novel
    1,597 words
    Innocence, Compassion, and some Crazy Cliff A novel, which has gained literary recognition worldwide, scrutiny to the point of censorship and has established a following among adolescents, The Catcher in the Rye is in its entirety a unique connotation of the preservation of innocence and the pursuit of compassion. With certain elegance the writer J.D. Salinger, substantiates the growth and perils, which lie between childhood and adulthood. Embellishing the differentiation between innocence and s...
  • Holden
    980 words
    The Catcher In The Rye: Connection to the Title The title of the novel The Catcher In The Rye, by JD Salinger, has a substantial connection to the story. This title greatly explains the main character, Holden Caulfield, and his feelings towards life and human nature. In society he has found enormous corruption, vulgarity, harm and havoc. He knows that the children of the world are ruined by the corruption of adults around them and, he states later in the novel, his new purpose in life will be to...
  • Moral Emptiness And Irrelevance Of Holden's World
    1,002 words
    Hello, is Salinger There? J.D. Salinger's only published full-length novel, The Catcher in the Rye, has become one of the most enduring classics of American literature. The novel's story is told in retrospect by the main character, Holden Caulfield, while staying in a psychiatric hospital in California. This is a coming of age tale that is wrought with irony. Holden Caulfield, Mr. Antolini, and Phoebe are the main symbols of irony. The first and most obvious subject of irony is the novel's prota...
  • Holden Caulfield
    1,193 words
    JD Salinger, also known as Jerome David Salinger, is an American novelist and short story writer. Critics and readers alike recognize Salinger as one of the most popular and influential writers. His only novel, The Catcher in the Rye, drew such great attention during the fifties and sixties that those years have been called the age of Holden Caulfield (Contemporary Literary Critiscm, Vol. 12). Salinger is a master of contemporary dialect and idiomatic expression. He created in Holden Caulfield a...
  • Holden
    1,575 words
    Growing Pains Many people have many problems, but there is one in particular. It is growing up. Most children want to grow up in a hurry so that they can take part in the adult aspect of having fun. Except adulthood is not at all about fun and games. And when children venture into adulthood they lose the sense of purity and innocence that encompasses them as a child. Children have a sense of this utopian world of theirs when they reach adulthood; however, adulthood is actually all about sacrific...
  • Holden His Duties As The Catcher
    1,176 words
    In J.D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye, there are many themes that are perceptible, however the most dominant theme was embedded in the title of the book. This is why in this essay I will address the significance of the title of this book. At the very outset, I will like to state what the title signified. The title established Holden Caulfield, the protagonist's obligations in life, as stated by himself. Holden wished to serve humanity by safeguarding the innocence and purity of children, by prot...
  • Holden's Realization
    2,545 words
    Catcher In the Rye: The Quest For Love In many novels in J.D. Salinger's library of books, there is a recurring theme of the loss of innocence of children, the falling and the confusions of childhood, and many other ideas that apply to the ideas of adolescence and the life of the average teenager growing up. Many of his themes occur in a short period of time in a child's life that affects him / her in a very profound and significant way. The idea of love is also a major theme that arises in many...
  • Catcher In The Rye Innocence
    2,124 words
    J.D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye Compared to Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn All famous American authors have written novels using a variety of characters, plots, and settings to illustrate important themes. Throughout literary history many of the same themes have been stressed in different novels. In J.D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye and Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, each author writes about the common theme of coming of age. The two novels were written more than half a ...
  • Allie X To Holden The World
    4,636 words
    Struggle with pain in growing-up Introduction J.D. Salinger is one of the most significant post-World War II American novelists, when he published his. The Catcher in the Rye x in 1951, he gained immediately a great reputation, especially among younger intellectuals. Shortly after the publishing, the book becomes assigned reading for a majority of high school and college English course, which proves his success in another way. Holden Caufield, the protagonist in the Catcher in the Rye, became th...
  • Holden Caulfield Through The Places
    1,342 words
    Holden Caulfield makes the transition from childhood to adulthood in the novel, The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger. He was able to resist his urge for sex, realizing that he was not yet responsible enough to handle it. Holden, who was not very fond of people in general, displayed a high toleration for young children. He was able to overcome his fear of the unpredictable challenges of the world through the places he visited and people he encountered. In a few short days, Holden was able to g...

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