Analysis on Holden Caulfield in the Catcher in the Rye 英语专业毕业论文.doc
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1、Analysis on Holden Caulfield in the Catcher in the RyeThesis statement: Holden Caulfield is in many ways a typical teenager of the complicated and paradoxical youth. He has a nave and kind heart with a great ideal, and he is willing to pursue the wonderful life. He only wants to be a catcher in the
2、rye to be the guardian of innocence and the protector of innocents. I demonstrate his honesty, generosity, and kind from the descriptions and the incidents in some chapters.Outline. Introduction.The personality of Holden CaulfieldBrief introduction to the prospectus of The Catcher in the RyeA. Holde
3、ns honesty and sincerity1.His thoughts on Selma Thurmer2.His deeds to others3.His deeds comparing with that of the adultB. Holdens generosity1.Contribution of his time to accompany others2.His tendency to try to find some good in most people3.His donation to the nunsC. Holdens kindness1.Consideratio
4、n for others2.His unwillingness to make life difficult for people3.His desire to protect the children. ConclusionAbstractThis paper analyses the personality of the protagonist, Holden Caulfield, who is a controversial character. In this paper, the author mainly figures out the positive character of
5、Holden Caulfield. Then the author analyses the personality of Holden Caulfield from three aspects: Holden Caulfield himself is a sincere person, and he tends to espouse is authenticity, disgusting falsehood. Holden Caulfield can not help being generous. Holden Caulfield is a very kind boy. Key Words
6、: honesty, sincerity, generosity, kindness内容提要本文主要对麦田里的守望者一书中的主人公霍尔顿考尔菲德这一人物性格进行分析。这是一个颇具争议的人物,本文主要从正面理解的此人物。首先大致介绍当时美国的历史背景以及作者J.D.塞林格本人的生活经历。接下来本文从三方面分析阐述霍尔顿考尔菲德的性格:一是霍尔顿考尔菲德他本人的正直和他对真实的追求和对虚伪的厌恶。二是霍尔顿考尔菲德帮助他人的慷慨大方。三是霍尔顿考尔菲德发自内心的善良。关键词:正直, 真实, 慷慨大方, 善良 IntroductionHis creator is not without his le
7、gend either. Jersome David Salinger, man of mystery and conscientious alien from all things connected with the society that his youthful hero laments over, has progressively withdrawn from the company of all but a select few of his fellow human beings, and upon these he appearsto have imposed a vow
8、of silence. The facts of his earlier years, consequently, heavily outweigh the information we have later.He was born in 1919 to a well-to-do merchant family in New York City. The only other child in his family, a sister, was eight years older than he. His father was a prosperous meat importer who tr
9、ied unsuccessfully to groom his son for the trade. An average student with an average I.Q., Salinger attended both public and private schools in Manhattan. Finally he was sent off to a military academy in Pennsylvaniaperhaps a partial model for Holden Caulfields Pencey Prepwhere he receive his only
10、diploma. Aside from the typical extra-curricular activities, at school and at a Maine summer camp, such as acting, fencing, writing for the yearbook and the like, he was remembered for no dramatic escapades of the kind that characterize Holden Caulfield, and left no record of unusual accomplishment.
11、 After putting in his time in the military academy he spent less than a month trying out college at New York University and completed his academic career taking a short-story course at Columbia University. This course, given by the editor of Story magazine, resulted in the publication of his first s
12、hort story in the same magazine in 1940.Drafted in 1942, Salinger spent the next four years in the Army. Apparently the young Salinger never stopped writing, since he is described by himself and others as writing in hotel rooms during weekend passes, in tents by flashflight, and even, if we can acce
13、pt the more amazing aspects of the legend, in the foxholes. Certainly, if he was not writing all the time, he was alert to the artistic possibilities of his experiences, for many of them turn up in one form or other in his later stories. Biographical information becomes less available at this point,
14、 being based more on hearsay and conjecture and less on the small body of fact that Salinger has been willing to provide.What is so important about the facts of Salingers life? Certainly his work stands or falls on its own merits. But the mystery surrounding his life is elaborated because he is at o
15、nce the most artistically established young American writer and the one about whom the public knows least. Unlike Hemingway, whom Salinger met during his military sojournHemingway thought he had a “helluva” talentSalinger does not have an affinity for dramatic experiences. He is not an activist livi
16、ng openly in the public eye; he is a practitioner of the cult of secrecy.However, some of the details about his life often have a fictional counterpart in his works.For example, both Salinger and his creation, Holden, attended prep schools and were members of the fencing team (although Holden is mer
17、ely the teams manager). During the prep-school career of both Salinger and Holden Caulfield, a suicide and a nervous breakdown of a fellow student occurred. Thus the students biographical examination is not without relevance, for it illuminates some of the techniques by which Salingers experience ar
18、e transformed into works of art.J.D. Salinger has some other famous works. Following The Catcher in the Rye publishing in 1951, Nine Story was published in 1953, and Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters, and Seymour, an Introduction was published in 1963. All subsequent works listed after The Catche
19、r in the Rye are short stories, most of them published prior to collective issuance. The reason I cho ose to analyze The Catcher in the Rye is that this book is J.D. Salingers first and the most successful works. In the late 40s and the early 51s, while the pieces from Nine Stories were being publis
20、hed separately, Salinger was undoubtedly trying to work into a novel his earlier stories about Holden Caulfield. The Catcher in the Rye became upon publication in 1951 an almost immediate success. As a midsummer Book-of-Month Club selection, for example, it certainly exposed Salinger to a larger aud
21、ience than he had hitherto enjoyed. If, indeed, “enjoy” is the proper word, since the degree of popularity was enough to disturb Salinger, who directed that his picture be removed from the third and subsequent issues of the book. He remarked later to a friend that “I feel tremendously relieved that
22、the season for success for The Catcher in the Rye is nearly over. I enjoyed a small part of it, but most of it I found hectic and professionally and personally demoralizing.” Reviews of the novel were mixed, from out-and-out approval to questions about Salingers attitudes, the colloquial style, the
23、focus on an adolescent boy, and of course, the issue that has since attracted attention, whether the book was fit for young readers. Thus, The Catcher in the Rye, especially since issuance as a paperback in 1953, has been, curiously, both stipulated for and banned from high school and college readin
24、g lists.The theme of The Catcher in the Rye, in its broadest sense, would be the difficulty of growing up, the lonely and arduous voyage from innocence to experience. Perhaps because the American nation and traditions are so young, many prominent American novelists have used the theme of a young per
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