Publishing is a terrible invasion of my privacy. I like to write. I love to write. But I write just for myself and my own pleasure.
Jerome David J. Salinger was one of the most influential writers of the 20th century. Born in New York, , his path to a literary career was anything but straight. After failing out of a college preparatory school, Salinger was sent to military school. Upon returning, he attended New York University for one year, then went to Europe, then returned to school at Ursinus College, and then finally Columbia University.
It was at Columbia where his writing career really began, after meeting Whit Burnett, professor and editor of a short story magazine. It is part of life and part of growing up. In The Catcher in the Rye, what does Holden erasing the profanity symbolize? Holden erasing profanity symbolically represents his desire to preserve innocence and protect children from the competitive real world, which is associated with his affinity for his childhood and fear of becoming an adult.
Well, if he did get pneumonia and die, Phoebe would miss him a lot. So he had better go visit her. In giving the hat to Phoebe towards the end of the book, Holden is showing his concern for her well-being. He is offering his sister a symbol of childhood and the relative safety and security that it embodies.
Why does Holden cry uncontrollably when Phoebe gives him her Christmas money? Summer Program Reviews College Reviews. Program Links Program Reviews. Who Banned Catcher in the Rye and Why? December 5, More by this author. View profile. I like this 0. Vote this 0. Post a comment. Add to favorites. Submit your own. Similar Articles. Previous Next. The "Unsinkable" Ship. World War II. Massive Beasts Like Us.
This article has 15 comments. Post comment. FlexibleGarlicTray said Jack said Wtf are you talking about. Angry German Man said No that's the stupidest shit I've ever heard you fat fuck face pussy.
Loucyndi said Do you believe President Donald Trump has made this type of so called rebellious behavior more acceptable behavior for not only teenagers but for all agers? Ken M said All books should be banned hehe xd x. So is this book considered important because the word "fuck" is used or does it have some good ideas?
The whole goddamn wink book is about Holden's rebellion and inability to conform to society's standards, which exudes an individualistic spirit. It really makes me laugh when people find this book "communist". Funny that some groups considered the book communist, yet the book has been banned in several schools.
My favorite book ever! Ayyy lmao said I disagree, I'm 16 from a middle class family in Florida and we've just started reading this book as an assignment in my english teacher. Being only 10 chapters in, I can relate more to Holden more than I can to almost any other character in other popular books.
He got flunked out of his schools His own doing because he wasn't happy in the environment they provided. I can relate to this as I don't enjoy the environment my schools have provided thus far. He chose to drink and smoke. While I don't drink or smoke, this is a very minor habit I can overlook and move past. There's nothing offensive about it, they're just things people do. He chose to treat everyone around him like dirt? I guess you could say that, but you're really stretching it with this one.
He's a teenager in a private school full of other middle to upper class kids, they all treat each other like dirt, it's really no surprise. In the book, Akley or Stradlater treated him just as poorly as he treated them. He didn't confront his parents when he got kicked out of Pencey because he didn't have to confront them Only at chapter 10 so as far as I'm aware, he's still waiting until Wednesday to do that.
He wanted them to find out from the letter and let it sink in, he didn't leave Pencey early so he could go straight back, he went to New York and got a hotel room so he could wait until they got the letter. Just like some students would skip a class until the teacher or school faculty call their parents to let their parents know that they're skipping before actually telling their parents themselves.
It's a bit cowardly, but relatable none the less. I've enjoyed this book very much so far and have been reading it anytime I have the spare time since I got it around PM yesterday. I don't need to go to a private school to relate, I've been going to a public school all my life and don't see how the fact that it takes place in a private school has anything to do with it.
Our public education isn't as bad as people make it out to be, or at least that's how I feel anyways. Maybe that's because it's a part of my normal day though.
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