Stereotypes In The Outsiders

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Imagine being dim-witted, stealing and carrying blades everywhere you go, and being unable to feel deeply, those words would make people think of Greasers. Most people when they think of gangs they think, that they fight, steal, and do not care about what is going on around them. Those statements that Greaser's and other assortments of gangs are brainless, criminals, and unfeeling may not be true, Ponyboy, the main character in S.E. Hinton’s book The Outsiders, opposes all of those statements. When people hear Greaser they think of them as not being very smart. This stereotype may have come from how most Greasers have dropped out of school, but Ponyboy is still in school and doing well. Ponyboy has also proved time and time again the he is smart, for example, “I'm not like Greaser's could be described as intimidating or violent, but to describe Ponyboy as being intimidating or violent would be hysterically wrong. For example, Ponyboy after being jumped by the Socs thought; “I felt hot tears running down my cheeks (Hinton 8)” this would show that he was able to cry which would make him look less intimidating. Another reason why people would think Greasers are violent is when Two-Bit, another Greaser in his gang, handed Ponyboy a broken bottle to attack the Socs. When he was handed the bottle, he dropped it, and said “I couldn’t use this (Hinton 45)”. That would contradict that Ponyboy is violent because if was he would have slashed the Socs up. The Greasers hair is something that the book brought up many times, and how it made them look intimidating. Ponyboy’s hair for the middle and final part of the book was cut short and bleached which made him look less intimidating. One would associate being a delinquent would therefore make them unfeeling, but describing Ponyboy as unfeeling would completely contradict the entire

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