Transcript Document

The Catcher in the Rye
J. D. Salinger
The novel’s success
 Still
on the top 100 best seller list
 Because…
 “It
captures the mood of the adolescent
who wants desperately to fit in but doesn’t
want to seem as if he does, who wants to
act flippantly but who, underneath that
flippancy, has great sorrow.”
- Tom Wolfe
The Historical Context –
1950s

“Youthquake”


As rebellious 1950s gave way to radical 1960s –
youth culture emerged
Impact on





Movies – AMERICAN GRAFFITI, THE GRADUATE,
REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE, FAST TIMES AT
RIDGEMONT HIGH
TV – Dawson Creek
Music – Green Day; Smashing Pumpkins
Generation Gap
Holden Caulfield – represents a symbol of restless
American youth – troubled, jaded, hopeful
1950s
The Author

Born January 1, 1919
 Mother – Irish
 Father – Jewish
 Flunked out of a prep school


Valley Forge Military Academy
Liked to lie
 Army
 Married twice
 2 children
Another Recluse

1953 moved to Cornish, New Hampshire
 Ironically, by being a recluse, he insured he
would remain famous for being a recluse
 Reasons?



Did he burn out?
Could he not better the success of Catcher?
Emotional? Psychological?
The Setting
– primary action takes place
 “Lost weekend”
 NYC
 Saturday
afternoon to Monday afternoon
on cold December day – campus
of Pencey Prep in Agerstown
Pennsylvania
 Opens
 Just
been expelled for failing grades
The Style
 Modern
Fiction
 Immediate
involvement with character
 Use of slang/idioms – “phonies”
 colloquial
 Male adolescent voice
 Full of verbal irony – “a real prince”
 First-person
flashback
Point of View

1st person narrative

More intimate and personal than 3rd person

Holden Caulfield doesn’t tell us everything…



Be skeptical – look for gaps between Holden’s
words and his actions!
Look for examples of what Holden VALUES



“I was sort of crying” (52).
Who does he admire and why?
Who does he criticize and why?
Flashback
Salinger and Golding
 Disagree
– concept of evil/sin
 Agree
 No
one can grow up if they don’t deal with
the awful side of themselves…to repress it,
is to give it power. To let it out is to control
it.
This book is about a …
 Journey
 Odyssey
 Childhood
to adulthood
 Innocence to knowledge
 World changing…and how does one
cope
Censorship and the novel

One of the most frequently banned books in
schools between 1966-1975
 Reason?


Language
Actions of Holden
The novel’s most famous line…
“If you had a million years to do it in, you
couldn’t rule out even half of the ‘f…. you’
signs in the world.”

Chapter 1 – note…
 Use
of slang
 Use of nouns for adjectives
 Exaggerations
And enjoy…
The End
Sept. 12th:
Old School, Old Teachers, Old Friends.
• IN your journal, answer the Journal entry on the
Board.
• We’ll be reading Ch. 3 in class, so get out Catcher
in the Rye, and open the Journal to the ‘Notes’
section of your journal.
Sept. 17th:
Holden and You…..
• Read Chapters 8 & 9 from the Novel in
class.
• Complete as much of the packet given to
you in class (group is ok – as long as it’s
cooperative, not copying).
• Complete the Venn Diagram worksheet
(due Wednesday)
• For Homework: Read Chapters 10 & 11.
Sept. 18th:
New York, New York….
• Turn in “Holden and You” Venn Diagram.
• Reading Quiz:
on a separate sheet of paper, summarize
the novel thus far (Ch. 1 -11). The
paragraph needs to be 8+ sentences, and
use 2 -3 examples from the text.
• Discussion of New York as a setting.
Sept. 19th:
To Change or not to Be….
• Get out your LOGBOOK and create a new entry:
“To Change or Not to Be”.
• On the new page of the Logbook, create a T-Chart.
Label the Left column: “Reasons For/Against Change.”
Label the Right column: “Evidence”
• In your groups, you are responsible to come up with
2+ two reasons Holden is against change,
and 1+ reasons why he can’t avoid it. For each reason
find 2 quotes from the text that support it. (Different
topics, of course.)
Sept:
th
20
Glass Cases
 Get
out Catcher in the Rye and your
LOGBOOK.
 Open
up to the “Catcher Notes” section.
 Add any notes throughout our reading and
discussion.
 Open
to Ch. 16 and read in class, while
we discuss.
Sept:
th
20
Glass Cases
 Journal:
On Holden’s way to the NATURAL HISTORY
MUSEUM, he thinks to himself “Certain things
they should stay the way they are. You ought
to be able to stick them in one of those big
glass cases and just leave them alone” (122).
 What does Holden mean by this
statement?
 What things do you think should be kept in
glass cases?
Sept
rd
23 :
Ducks and ….Death?
 Reading
Quiz: Get out a sheet of paper,
and Catcher in the Rye.
 “Ducks and Death”
 Homework:
Read Chapters 21 & 22
Chapter Quiz: 12-21
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
What does Holden plan on doing with Sally Hayes at 2
p.m.?
Who sits down next to Holden at the breakfast
counter?
What do Holden and Sally do after the movie?
Who is Valencia?
Who did Holden Caulfield talk to on the phone, why?
Carl Luce suggests that Holden go to a _______.
Who does Holden look for in Central Park?
What character from Romeo and Juliet did Holden like
the most?
What do we learn about Allie’s funeral?
Why does Holden think he might get pneumonia?
Sept
rd
23 :
Ducks and ….Death?
 Get
out Catcher in the Rye and your
LOGBOOK.
 Create
a T-Chart
 Reread pages 81 - 83 & 154 – 156 to
yourself.
 There are two topics that Holden is
describing during this scene – one in the
present and one in the past – what are they?
 In the T-Chart, list Holden’s descriptions,
and thoughts about the different scenes.
 Who
are the ducks?
Sept
th
24 :
Coming through the Rye….

Holden’s ‘women’…






How are these women the
same/different?
What about them appeals to
Holden?
Create a ‘comparison chart’
for these three (at least).
Reread pages 172 - 73
“Coming through the Rye”




Jane
Sally
Phoebe
Others???
What is Holden’s ‘dream’?
Why might he want this for his future?
(How does this relate to the ‘ducks’?)
Read R. Burn’s Poem – what do you think it means? How
does this relate to Holden’s ‘dream’?
Homework: Read Chapters 23 & 24
Sept 26th:
Socratic Seminar: Catcher in the Rye

Spend a few minutes developing an answer for the
following question. Be ready to discuss it with the
class, using evidence from the novel to support
your ideas.



What was the symbolism of the Golden Ring and the
Merry-go-Round? And why didn’t Holden want to ride
it?
Is Holden a Saint or Hypocrite? What do the events
that support your answer reveal about his character?
The novel is structured about Holden’s encounters
with others. Does anything change in Holden’s
interactions through the novel? What causes these
changes?