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Theme Of Innocence In Catcher In The Rye

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When innocence is lost, there is no going back. Losing innocence and growing up is difficult. In the book, The Catcher in the Rye, Holden gets kicked out of boarding school and decides to go to New York for a few days to avoid his parents and gets himself into multiple ill-fated circumstances. Throughout the book Holden is desperately trying to figure out how to be an adult by asking random adults that he comes across. Holden also attempts to preserve the innocence of the people around him, but isn’t able to. In The Catcher in the Rye, innocence is important to Holden because he associates innocence with Allie being alive, and the loss of innocence with the death of Allie. Through the static state of the museum and the preserved memory of Jane and Allie, Salinger displays that Holden can’t accept that losing innocence is an inherent part of growing up.
There are multiple instances throughout The Catcher in the Rye where Holden talks about liking things that stay the same. When he goes on a walk in New York, he sees the museum that he went to when he was younger and mentions that the best thing about it is that “everything always stayed right where it was. Nobody’d move […] nobody’d be different” (121). Later, in the very end of the book when him and Phoebe are going to the carrousel, he says that something he likes about carrousels is that they “always play the same songs” (210). Holden’s fascination with things that don’t change reveals how he doesn’t understand the process

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