What Does The Red Hunting Hat Symbolize In Catcher In The Rye

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Many teens learn lessons the hard way during their childhood. In the novel The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger, a 16-year-old boy named Holden, wandering the streets of New York City meeting new people and reconnecting with others. The novel contains symbols, irony, and imagery that contributes to the overall theme on how growing up is a part of life.
To begin, in Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye, symbols revolve around Holden’s life and show his confusion about growing up. In the novel, Holden and Ackley, a boy portrays himself as disgusting and nosey, discuss the meaning of a red hunting hat Holden owns in their dorm at Pencey Preparatory School. While Ackley considers it a deer shooting hat, Holden bluntly states, “This is a people …show more content…

The red hunting hat links to his childhood because although he claims he shoots people, the reader infers he does not shoot people. Instead, Holden finds the hat a source of pride but attempts to persuade Ackley he is a mature individual who is not afraid to confront people. Also, the symbolic red hunting hat appears again when Holden wanders the lonely streets of New York City a day after Maurice and Sunny forces five dollars from Holden in a hotel. When wandering the streets, Holden thinks about Phoebe, his little sister, and ruminates about life when he narrates, “I took my old hunting hat out of my pocket while I walked and put it on”(Salinger 122). When Holden experiences the robbery and beating by Maurice, Holden is mentally and physically in pain, but putting the red …show more content…

In Catcher in the Rye, Holden is with Phoebe, in her bedroom, contemplating why he so strongly desires to not grow up and reserve his innocence, but the more he expresses his true feelings he reveals, “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”(Salinger 173). The reader clearly visualizes the rye and the cliff Salinger describes but the significance of the use of imagery is how Holden envisions himself being a savior for all the boys and girls who go the wrong path when heading into the dangerous adult world. Without the use of vivid imagery, the reader simply forgets how the title of the book relates to how Holden balks at the idea of growing up into a world where only phonies live therefore he feels the need to protect the kids left before their lives forever change and their innocence disappears for good. In addition, Salinger properly introduces a crucial individual, Mr. Antolini, who seems to alter Holden’s point of view on adulthood and by doing so, the use of imagery appeals to the reader’s understanding of the theme of the novel. When Holden refuses to stay at his house because he does not want his parents finding out he is home

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