Holden Caulfield Character Analysis Essay

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Holden Caulfield is a character that most of the world can relate to. He 's funny, sarcastic, emotional, and, most importantly, innocently naïve. Throughout the novel, he displays a childlike naivety to the reader. In fact, his naivety is one of the most important themes in the provocative The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger. The story is essentially about the journey of a schoolboy throughout New York City and how the journey changes him. Throughout the course of four days, Holden gets into a myriad of troubles, such as Sunny, the prostitute, Sally Hayes, a girl that Holden had previously enjoyed the company of, and finally, the brutal, unforgiving bite of the cold. Throughout the novel, Holden’s naivety, innocence, and everlasting fear …show more content…

It is indicative of Holden’s childlike nature and attitude towards the world. Since the onset of Holden’s journey, he demonstrates very childlike mannerisms in all situations. He is sarcastic, funny, and, at times, somewhat rude, much like a child is to his peers and other people. Holden’s conversation with Phoebe highlights this symbolic characteristic of his.. When Phoebe asks Holden about his dream job, he, “keep picturing all these little kids playing some game in this big field of rye and all. Thousands of little kids, and nobody’s around-nobody big, I mean-except me. And I 'm standing on the edge of some crazy cliff. What I have to do, I have to catch everybody if they start to go over the cliff-I mean if they 're running and they don’t look where they 're going and I have to come out somewhere and catch them” (Salinger 173). This notion of “catching everybody if they start to go over the cliff” is a symbol of something greater and more powerful than a dream job. It is Holden’s life-long dream and innate desire to protect anyone and everyone he knows from the dangers and vices of adulthood. Throughout the novel, Holden can be seen displaying childlike behavior. That behavior is an indicator of one of Holden’s desires to quench his thirst for eternal youth, to spend the rest of his life in Neverland, to ultimately live forever in the …show more content…

Every since he enlisted in the army, Salinger was greeted by trials, tribulations, pain, suffering, and near death experiences. The Catcher in the Rye is Salinger’s way of expressing his disappointment in the world and all the phonies that occupy it. Salinger saw his brothers in arms die right before him in countless battles against the Nazis and the Japanese. He saw people he knew and cared about die in a frenzy of bullet fire. He saw his fellow soldiers get slaughtered and die, like a lamb before the knife. The Catcher in the Rye represents all of Salinger’s pent up resentment that was left over from the war. In fact, Holden himself represents Salinger’s angst at the world. Holden’s obsession and resentment over phonies and the

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