The social and growth theme of "catcher in the lie" is reading J. D. Salinger's novel "Rye Catcher" when people have to respond very strongly to the content of this book. Regardless of whether the response is negative or positive, the reader will give a second thought about the novel after reading, it is beyond doubt. There are many reasons for this novel to influence the reader. This may be the use of a sarcastic, often negative, Salanger 's compelling slang phrase, attracting the reader' s attention. Another possibility is Holden, the subject and the protagonist of the novel. "He expressed everything as" false "and asked for honesty.
Rider's catcher JD Salinger explores the literary installation that JD Salinger used at "Rye Watcher" to convey the relationship between this theme of growth and the idea in the 21st century. One of the main themes of JD Sarlinger's "The Catcher" is growing and how difficult it is. Writers communicate this theme through various literary means including expression, symbols, and important events. The idea created by Salinger is very clear ... a typical American child woke up with a sweet juice with sweet juice and then watched a few minutes of TV before going to school. After school, the same child can enjoy pizza roll or other processed food prepared in 90 seconds after microwave oven. After the snacks, children can watch video games and TV for several hours until dinner is ready.
The catcher of the novel catcher, the theme is insight into real life. J. D. Salinger's Enlightenment Novel "Rye Catcher" explains the adventure of the first-person narrator who refused to become an adult, the hero, 16-year-old Holden Colefield. The most important theme of the development of Salinger is the problem of dealing with Holden's change, he is difficult to cope with death, the child is lost as a necessary step in the growth process, and the innocence that growth is difficult I refuse to accept.
JD Salinger's adolescent experience on catchers has become the central theme of many novels, but JD Salinger's 'Writer's Writer' has captured hypersensitivity for a long time under the main content of the academic curriculum did. The spiritual form of this life stage dramatically expresses the vulgar words of Holden Colefield and the dramatic reaction. As an autobiographical record of Halden Caulfield, a student before graduating from a fictional university, "The Catcher in the Rye" deals with social scandals of the time (Gwynn, 1958).