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Why Is The Outsiders So Popular

Decent Essays

There are many influential books and one includes The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton. In the novel, it contains details about fitting in and fitting out. Ponyboy Curtis, the main character, is a greaser. Greasers are considered the outcast who are poor. The Socs are considered popular who are rich. There are, apparently, many qualifications that you have to reach in order to be popular. If you did not wear the same brand of clothing or did not act like them, you were not popular. In the fifth grade, I was bullied from two main girls that I foolishly wanted to be. Well not a bully ,but to be “popular” like them. One of the two girls was my friend. At least I thought she was. I guess she was using me for when her and her best friend would get into a fight and then she would use me for a friend. She told me i was her friend; she just did not want her best friend to find out she was hanging with me. In other words, she was embarrassed of me. Her best friend was the …show more content…

We saw the same sunset.” - Ponyboy Curtis. In the novel, it states this quote and it compares the life of the greasers and the Socs. This shows that although they claim that they are different, they still are the same. Both of their world links together in a way. Labels are just labels. They don’t mean anything. Where I am at right now is that I am neither just an insider or outsider. I am both. I am friends with everyone. Ponyboy and I can relate. In the beginning, Ponyboy was at my stage of life where everything about the Socs were bad. In reality, they actually weren’t. I thought that being popular would help my reputation around school and I would be liked by more people when it did nothing for me. I just learned that it does not matter and became myself. Everything that I wanted in fifth grade came to me in the sixth grade without even trying. Popularity and the “outcasts” and Socs and Greasers are just labels. They do not define

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