preview

Dishonesty In Catcher In The Rye

Decent Essays

Rhetorical Analysis: J.D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye “Oh what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive!”. This line from a poem by Walter Scott, born in the late eighteenth-century, highlights that dishonesty is a gift that keeps on giving. Several decades later, J.D. Salinger published his book Catcher in the Rye, which stars sixteen-year-old Holden Caulfield as he wanders around New York City after leaving school early. Holden is a self-confessed liar, and throughout the story he tells little fibs that he usually ends up regretting. J.D. Salinger chose the rhetorical choices of first-person narration and repetition to imprint upon the reader that dishonesty, though necessary to survival, negatively affects …show more content…

When a word or phrase is repeated, it tends to stand out to the reader. When a situation is repeated, it usually means that the character(s) involved haven’t learned from their mistakes and shows that the reader should take care if they find themselves in a similar situation. The situation repeated in Catcher in the Rye is that of Holden saying or doing something untrue and eventually regretting it, even if dishonesty seemed like the better choice to him at the time. The first time this happens is on the train after Holden leaves Pencey; he meets one of his classmate’s mothers on the train and gives her a false name because he doesn’t want to have to tell her all about himself. “I probably would’ve told her what really happened, but it would’ve taken too long. I liked her, though. I was beginning to feel sort of sorry I’d told her my name was Rudolf Schmidt,” (Salinger 56). When asked his name, Holden decided that it would be easier to give a false name to Ernie’s mother, but once he breaks the ice a little bit he regrets his decision because he is attracted to her, and he’s socially savvy enough to know that changing one’s name in the middle of a conversation is not widely accepted as a proper gesture. The second example of Holden’s dishonest/unhappy situation is after he got to his hotel. While there, he decided he wanted to be with someone, so he called a girl that knew someone that he’d known. The girl asks if he wants to meet up the next

Get Access