Holden Caulfield Objectification Of Women

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“Real ugly girls have it tough”: The Objectification of Women in The Catcher in the Rye According to UN Women UK, 97% of women have experienced a form of sexual harassment. A Forbes report from March 2024 reports that women today earn an average of 84 cents for every dollar a man makes. These statistics are the consequences of men’s treatment towards women throughout history. Women have never been treated fairly. Misogyny of this sort is depicted in The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger, a novel about 16-year-old Holden Caulfield, who has just been expelled from yet another prestigious boarding school due to academic failure. After his expulsion, he wandered around his home in New York City for two days. His sexual and social interactions with women during this …show more content…

It was not considered appropriate or acceptable. This misconception is detrimental to the way Holden treats and sees women. It complicates his relationships because these double standards that he cannot understand are so prominent in the lives of women he has relationships with. Holden is not affected by these standards, so they do not make sense to him. Girls not speaking up led Holden to assume they were useless. This misunderstanding caused Holden’s attitude that physical appearance is all that matters concerning women, another essential element of his treatment of them. An additional aspect of Holden’s complex view of women is that he acknowledges them as objects made for his own enjoyment. He objectifies to their bodies and disregards their personalities. As Holden is out on a date with a girl named Sally, he expresses distaste for her voice, thinking that “she had one of these very loud, embarrassing voices when you met her somewhere”. She got away with it because she was so damn good-looking, but it always gave me a pain in the arm” (138). Holden sees women only for their

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