Holden's Mental Instability In Catcher In The Rye

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A major theme in Catcher in The Rye is mental instability. This is a major theme because there are many examples of it throughout the book. The Catcher in The Rye is a story about Holden Caulfield a boy who has been expelled from three different boarding schools and feels that everybody is a phonie. At the time the story is being told Holden is residing in a rest home. Holden is mentally unstable because he is a hypocrite, depressed and resentful towards his parents. One example of Holden’s mental instability is that everything is depressing to Holden. Throughout the story Holden talks about how everything depresses him. When he runs into the girls at the bar and they ask him if he wants to go see the Christmas show at Radio City he talks about how it depresses him. The thought of the show depresses him because he dislikes phonies and believes that actors are phonies. He also gets depressed thinking about Allie, his dead brother, which leads him to thinking about how his mother is more worried about Allie than she is about him her living son. This makes him mentally unstable because he is depressed all the time and only one thing actually makes him happy and that is his sister. …show more content…

One minute he is saying how much he loves Sally, his on and off girlfriend, but by the end of his date with her he is saying how much he hates her. Another example of Holden being a hypocrite is when he was at the bar he was thinking about how he liked the piano music but also said he wanted to flip the piano over because he dislikes musicians and actors who cater/work for their audience. This makes him mentally unstable because he is unable to maintain one

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