登入
選單
返回
Google圖書搜尋
The Catcher in the Rye and Philosophy
Keith Dromm
Heather Salter
其他書名
A Book for Bastards, Morons, and Madmen
出版
Open Court
, 2012-10-09
主題
Philosophy / Essays
ISBN
0812698029
9780812698022
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=2A82JGF9Xf0C&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Few novels have had more influence on individuals and literary culture than J.D. Salinger’s
The Catcher in the Rye
. Published in 1951 and intended by Salinger for adults (early drafts were published in the
New Yorker
and
Colliers
), the novel quickly became championed by youth who identified with the awkwardness and alienation of the novel’s protagonist, Holden Caulfield. Since then the book and its reclusive author have been fixtures of both popular and literary culture.
Catcher
is perhaps the only modern novel that is revered equally by the countless Americans whom Holden Caulfield helped through high school and puberty and literary critics (such as the
New Yorker
’s Adam Gopnik who insisted as recently as 2010 that
Catcher
is a "perfect" twentieth-century novel).
One premise of
The Catcher in the Rye and Philosophy
is that the ease and sincerity with which readers identify with Holden Caulfield rests on Salinger’s attention to the nuances and qualities of experience in the modern world. Coupled with Salinger’s deft subjective, first-person style, Holden comes to seem more real than any fictional character should. This and other paradoxes raised by the novel are treated by authors who find answers in philosophy, particularly in twentieth-century phenomenology and existentialism--areas of philosophy that share Salinger’s attention to lived, as opposed to theorized, experience. Holden’s preoccupation with “phonies,” along with his constant striving to interpret and judge the motives and beliefs of those around him, also taps into contemporary interest in philosophical theories of justice and Harry Frankfurt’s recently celebrated analysis of "bullshit."
Per Salinger’s request,
Catcher
has never been made into a movie. One measure of the devotion and fanatical interest
Catcher
continues to inspire, however, is speculation in blogs and magazines about whether movie rights may become available in the wake of Salinger’s death in 2010. These articles remain purely hypothetical, but the questions they inspire--Who would direct? And, especially, Who would star as Holden Caulfield?--are as vivid and real as Holden himself.