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Theme Of Innocence In Catcher In The Rye

Decent Essays

Have you ever thought about what happens when you grow up? How do we change in the process? Or where our innocence disappears to? The book “The Catcher in the Rye” by J.D Salinger, as we read through we start to follow what the main character has to say about it. The catcher in the rye is about a boy named Holden, Holden finds himself stuck between adolescence and adulthood, although throughout the book it shows that he wants to keep it that way. Holden Caulfield is a troubled teenager that deals with death, academic struggles, and his life problems. He gets expelled from Pencey Prep and decides to take a vacation. He goes to New York City were the readers get to know more about him, like how Holden usually goes through a depressing stage. Holden searches for even tiny traces of innocence left from adults to believe that there is still hope. This essay will include three different aspects of innocence from the novel, Holden and how he takes place as the protector of innocence in Catcher in the Rye, children and how they represent innocence in Holden’s eyes, and innocence in Holden himself. The protection of innocence is the way innocence is kept from being broke. Holden tries to protect children from the fake and ‘phony’ adults that take their innocence away from them . This is the first time that the metaphor of being the catcher in the rye is explicitly mentioned. “Thousands of little kids, and nobody's around...except me. And I'm standing on the edge of some crazy

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