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J.D. Salinger And The Catcher in the Rye

J.D. Salinger

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J.D. Salinger. And The Catcher in the Rye. Jerome David Salinger. Born - January 1, 1919 - Manhattan, NY Parents were wealthy Didn’t have a great relationship with his dad Went to prep schools, military school, Europe, and college in NY. Salinger’s Early Love Life. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: J.D. Salinger

J.D. SalingerAnd

The Catcher in the Rye

Page 2: J.D. Salinger

Jerome David Salinger

• Born - January 1, 1919 - Manhattan, NY• Parents were wealthy• Didn’t have a great relationship with his dad• Went to prep schools, military school, Europe, and college in NY

Page 3: J.D. Salinger

Salinger’s Early Love Life

Salinger fell in love with Oona O’Neill -->

But she left him for Charlie Chaplin -->

He was much older than she was!

Page 4: J.D. Salinger

Experiences in War

• Drafted into the Infantry in WWII

• Involved in the invasion of Normandy

• Involved in a useless battle at Hürtgenwald– Witnessed atrocities of war

• Suffered from PTSS (post-traumatic stress syndrome), a.k.a. “shell shock”

Page 5: J.D. Salinger

Other Relationships

• Sylvia - 1945 - divorced• Claire Douglas - 1955 - divorced in 1967

– Two children, Margaret and Matt

• Joyce Maynard - 1970s - girlfriend (broke up because she was much younger and wanted children; he thought he was too old)

• Colleen O’Neill - late 1980s (married) - she was 40 years younger than Salinger

Page 6: J.D. Salinger

Death

• Salinger died of natural causes at his home in New Hampshire on January 27, 2010. He was 91.[8] Salinger's literary representative commented to The New York Times that the writer had broken his hip in May 2009, but that "his health had been excellent until a rather sudden decline after the new year."[122] The representative believed that Salinger's death was not a painful one.[122]

Page 7: J.D. Salinger

Publications

• Early short stories - published in magazines– Story– Saturday Evening Post– Esquire– The New Yorker

• Stories eventually published in collections– Franny and Zooey– Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters– Nine Stories

Page 8: J.D. Salinger

Publications

• The Catcher in the Rye– Salinger’s only novel (that we know of)– Published in 1951– Immediate success - quickly reached #4 on the

New York Times Bestseller List– Book-of-the-Month Club selection– Never out of print - still sells 250,000 copies

annually

Page 9: J.D. Salinger

Catcher Controversy • One of the most censored books of the 20th century

(#13 on the ALA list of most frequently challenged books of 1990-2000)– Language– Sexual themes– Alcohol– Blasphemy– Undermining family values– Holden being a poor role model

• At one point, Catcher was the most censored and second most taught book in the USA

Page 10: J.D. Salinger

Catcher Movie?

• Nope, sorry! Salinger won’t allow it!

• “Uncle Wiggly in Connecticut” --> My Foolish Heart– Took many liberties and changed the story

drastically– Salinger has since refused to allow any film

adaptations of his work

Page 11: J.D. Salinger

Interesting Tidbit

• In Margaret Salinger’s memoir, she revealed that J.D. Salinger drank his own urine.

• He did this for medicinal purposes

Page 12: J.D. Salinger

Some Lit Techs. And Terms

• Bildungsroman - coming of age story• Colloquialism - informal word or phrase,

more for conversation than written work• Slang - very informal word or phrase• Flashback - scene in a work that is set

in an earlier time than the main story• Dialogue - conversation between

characters

Page 13: J.D. Salinger

More Lit Techs. And Terms

• Symbol - a material object that represents an abstract idea– Colors – Animals– Weather– Clothing

• Which of these (and more) can you find in Catcher?

Page 14: J.D. Salinger

Mark David Chapman

Then this morning I went to the bookstore and bought The Catcher in the Rye. I'm sure the large part of me is Holden Caulfield, who is the main person in the book. The small part of

me must be the Devil.

Page 15: J.D. Salinger

Mark David Chapman

I went to the building. It's called the Dakota. I stayed there until he came out and asked him to sign my album. At that

point my big part won and I wanted to go back to my hotel, but I couldn't. I

waited until he came back. He came in a car. Yoko walked past first and I said

hello, I didn't want to hurt her.

Page 16: J.D. Salinger

Mark David Chapman

Then John came and looked at me and pointed [to] me. I took the gun from my coat pocket and fired at him. I can't believe I could do

that. I just stood there clutching the book. I didn't want to run away. I don't know what

happened to the gun. I remember Jose kicking it away. Jose was crying and telling me to please leave. I felt so sorry for Jose.

Then the police came and told me to put my hands on the wall and cuffed me.

Page 17: J.D. Salinger

Mark David Chapman

• John Lennon was quoted as saying, “We’re more popular than Jesus Christ now.”

• Chapman was angered by this and the fact that Lennon was preaching love and peace but had millions of dollars and was a celebrity

• Chapman read Catcher and felt that he WAS Holden Caulfield (he wanted to legally change his name to prove it)

Page 18: J.D. Salinger

Mark David Chapman

• Chapman became obsessed with killing John Lennon, and he finally did so outside Lennon’s hotel on December 8, 1980

• After he shot Lennon, he waited for the police by pacing back and forth on the sidewalk, trying to read The Catcher in the Rye

Page 19: J.D. Salinger

Mark David Chapman

• When looking back on meeting John Lennon’s son, Chapman said, ‘"He was the cutest little boy I ever saw. It didn't enter my mind that I was going to kill this poor young boy's father and he won't have a father for the rest of his life. I mean, I love children. I'm the Catcher in the Rye."

Page 20: J.D. Salinger