We All Fall Down, don't we?
Holden Caulfield’s fixation on innocence is less about childhood itself and more about coherence. Children make sense to him. Their feelings are direct, their reactions unedited. This is why Phoebe, Allie, and Jane occupy such a protected space in Holden’s mind. They represent a world where sincerity has not yet been steam rolled by social expectation and pressure that comes with growing up. And particularly Jane and Allie are perpetually stuck in this rye field that Holden watches over because they hold permanent memories in Holden's mind where their innocence is kept safe.
What Holden calls “phoniness” is the moment when emotion becomes strategic. Adults, in his eyes, have learned how to perform feeling rather than experience it. When he complains that schools are “full of phonies” where people only work hard so they can “buy a goddam Cadillac someday,” he is reacting to a version of adulthood that rewards ambition over authenticity.
The fantasy of being the catcher in the rye reveals how unstable Holden’s ideal of innocence really is. He imagines “all these little kids playing some game in this big field of rye,” with himself “standing on the edge of some crazy cliff,” catching them before they fall. Holden knows the fall is inevitable. Growing up is not a moral failure. It is a loss of clarity, and his fantasy exists because he cannot accept that loss. ("the older I get, the more I realize how little I know" is the quote that comes to mind, digest it however you will.)
Holden’s grief over Allie exposes the emotional core of this obsession. When Allie dies, Holden sleeps in the garage and “broke all the goddam windows with my fist.” Innocence becomes sacred because it is tied to someone who never had the chance to grow up. Holden is not trying to save childhood in general. He is trying to preserve the version of the world that existed before that loss. It's perhaps a strange way to cope, though it speaks volumes about who Holden is as a character and what he values. By the end of the novel, purity remains fragile and unsustainable. It can exist only in memory, in children, and in fleeting moments that cannot be preserved. The desire to freeze innocence, the novel suggests, is a response to grief, not a solution to it.
I like how you connected Phoebe, Allie, and Jane to the idea of the rye field in Holden's head; it is a really interesting way to understand his connection to both them and their innocence. I also really like how you explain Holden's view of "phonies" on a deeper level, which allows the reader to see Holden in a different light, rather than some 16-year-old who hates the world. It shows how deeply thought-out Holden's view of adults and phoniness really is. I agree that Holden is aware that the transition from childhood to adulthood and losing that innocence is inevitable, but that he isn't ready to believe it, and in this case, of being the catcher in the rye, he is physically holding on to that innocence. Overall, your blog really makes you think, really great job!
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