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Existentialism and The Catcher in the Rye

Background and Literary Thought. Existentialism and The Catcher in the Rye. Existentialism Explanation.

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Existentialism and The Catcher in the Rye

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  1. Background and Literary Thought Existentialism and The Catcher in the Rye

  2. Existentialism Explanation • This term is related to the psychology of Karl Jung who holds that behind each individual’s “unconscious”(blocked off residue of his/her past) lies the “collective unconscious” of the human race---blocked off memory of our racial past, even our pre human experiences.

  3. The Unconscious • The “unconscious” is shaped by the repeated experience of our ancestors, and is expressed through myths, religions, literature and dreams.

  4. Existentialism and the Literary Critic • The literary critic applies the term to an image, a descriptive detail, a plot pattern, or a character type that occurs frequently in literature, myth, religion, or folklore; therefore, believed to evoke profound emotions in the reader because it awakens a primordial image in his/her unconscious memory; thus, calls into play illogical, but strong responses (the archetype). • The archetypal critic tends to see each work of literature as a portion of the total human experience.

  5. Point of View (P.o.V): In Literature • Point of View is how you perceive your environment. In a literary sense, the author’s point of view is determined by the way he/she manipulates reality.

  6. 2 Types of P.o.V • Romantic P.o.V: manipulates the character, conflict, and environment so that events are resolved (life makes sense). • Ironic P.o.V(existential): life makes no “real” sense---only the “sense you choose to make of it. Deals with the absurd series of events that each person tries to make sense of.

  7. Things to think about… • WHAT IS REALITY? • “Reality” is the way people perceive the world around them. • Does everyone see or think reality the same way? • Objective Reality: “we” share it equally -physical presence • Subjective Reality: the individualized way each of us “sees” experiences.

  8. More to think about… • ARE YOU NORMAL? • What is NORMAL? • -What everybody thinks is average • -Society, in general, views “normal” as everybody being the same • -Normal is situational • -Can the same reaction be normal and abnormal? • -Is normal an individual response or is it a collective? • WHAT IS BEHAVIOUR? • -behaviour is the way in which someone acts, or the way someone acts towards someone/something. • -Behaviour, in clinical terms, an organism’s response to external stimuli. Behaviour depends upon FORMER experience. • WHAT IS STIMULUS? • -stimulus is something that causes a response to any sort of environmental activity or change.

  9. The Catcher in the Rye • Published in 1951 • Written by J.D. Salinger • Holden Caulfield, 16 is the protagonist • Written in 1st person, existential point of view • Set in 1950s, first chapters are set at an all boys boarding school Pencey Prep, rest of the book takes place in New York City

  10. More About Holden… • Sees everyone and society as fake or phony(he uses this word excessively) • He is smart, well-read, and handsome, but he is viewed as a failure and loner • He has been expelled from several prestigious schools • He is from an upper class family, he is the 2nd oldest of 4 • He often feels like he does not fit in, he gets depressed, he smokes, wants to drink, and uses profanity frequently

  11. About J.D. Salinger • He was a recluse---never went out of his house, lived in seclusion for more than 50 years. • Died Jan. 27, 2010 at 91 • thought at one time to be the most important American writer to emerge since World War II • sympathetic understanding of adolescence and its fierce if alienated sense of morality and distrust of the adult world, the novel struck a nerve in cold war America • The Catcher in the Rye continues to sell more than 250,000 copies a year in paperback.

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