The Outsiders Character Analysis Essay

670 Words2 Pages

So many people attempt to fit into society's standards. So many people want to be popular and fit in. In S.E Hinton's The Outsiders. Hinton expresses a deep and sinful desire that most individuals are guilty of through the main character, Ponyboy Curtis. In the novel, Ponyboy is caught up in a murder. Throughout the whole story, he is always mentioning how he wants a better life and would just like to fit in more. Through Ponyboy’s experiences with his emerging personality, self-realization, and Ponyboy understanding that he does not need to conform to other people’s standards, stereotypes, and needs. Ponyboy is often seen as a small, young, and vulnerable child, through the eyes of the gang and other people. In one instance Two-Bit gets upset at Ponyboy “Shut your mouth, kid. If you wasn’t Soda’s kid brother I’d beat the tar out of you” (Hinton, 42). Not only is Ponyboy lucky that he has the gang, he understands that he has different emotions and personalities than most of the gang. Ponyboy goes throughout the novel feeling like he has to do everything in his power to protect his friends, but he also wants to do what is best for him, this is …show more content…

He would do this even when it made him unhappy. When Ponyboy talks to Cherry Valance he realizes that he isn’t much different from everyone else, he tried so hard to be the best greaser. He realizes he can just be who he is, no matter what group he is a part of, “It seemed funny that the sunset [Cherry] saw from her patio and, the one I saw from the back steps was the same one. Maybe the two different worlds we lived in weren’t so different. We saw the same sunset” (Hinton, 40) Ponyboy having this feeling makes him realize that he has been trying too hard to fit in with the greasers, but greasers were no different than anyone else. Ponyboy needs this whole murder to happen so he could understand he had a purpose in the

Open Document