The book “The Outsiders” talks about two gangs and how they interact. “The Outsiders” is a book about Socs and Greasers. The story was written by S.E. Hinton, a person who hid her name because of gender. Further more, Hinton wrote the story about her person experience being between two gangs like the Greasers and Socs. Lastly, “The Outsiders” is told by Ponyboy Curtis, a Greaser, the main character of the story. There are two main themes in the story, “The Outsiders” which focus on the Greasers and the Socs and their differences in appearance and how they use violence to settle disagreements. One theme of the story is that the Greasers and Socs are are separated by appearance. Greasers are known for using oil/grease to sleak back their hair …show more content…
They’ll know we’re hoods the minute they see us, I thought”(S.E. Hinton 63-64). He says that Johnny looked tough because he was wearing a black T-shirt, blue jeans, a jacket, and had long heavily greased hair. Ponyboy explains how most Greasers looked. Next, Pony and Johnny ran away to settle in a church because Johnny killed Bob, a Socs. They decided to dye and cut Pony’s hair to depart him from his description. “My hair was even lighter than Sodapop’s. I’d never combed it to the side like that. It just didn’t look like me” (S.E. Hinton 72). Johnny and Pony looked like Greasers so they had to change their appearances to not get caught. Pony said he no longer looked like himself, he no longer looked like a Greaser, who should have long, dark, and greasy hair. After Bob was killed a fight begins between the Socs and Greasers. Then when Ponyboy returned from his runaway and heroism, he saved children from a burning church, he is told …show more content…
Appearance and violence from disagreement are some themes that differentiate the Socs and Greasers. In addition, in life there is stereotyping by appearance. People can judge others by the way they look whether it may or may not be correct, like how Ponyboy Curtis compared the Greaser’s appearance to the Socs. More on, people may treat others differently judging from how they look and appearance can separate someone from someone else but just based on looks or appearance shouldn’t be an excuse to distance others. Now in day appearances are used to heavily judge someone of their social class, personality, and background just like in “The Outsiders”. Violence is also a way people interact with one another in the real world and in stories. It’s a way to get something or a way to get in trouble, like how the Greasers and Socs fought to settle things, but even if violence is seen or read anywhere is shouldn’t be repeated. In conclusion judgement and violence upon people happen every day and
The book The Outsiders is the realistic story about this between two very different groups in a town in the United States: the poor Greasers from the east side, and the Socs, whitch is what the greasers call the socials, the richer boys from the other side of the town. Ponyboy Curtis is the narrator of the story, a 14-year-old boy who lives with his two older brothers, Darry and Soda. He is a pretty good athlete and student, but is not treated the same as the richer students at his school. Ponyboy uses to have long hair that he greases back, a symbol of being in the outsider gang. He is unhappy with his situation, because Darry is too protective of him and he always has to be afraid of Socs attacking him.
The Outsiders is a book about Greasers And Socs. The Greasers are the poor east side kids they would wear their hair long and greasy and they will dress in blue jeans, T-shirts, or wear they shirttails out and wear a leather jacket and tennis shoes or boots. The Socs are the rich west side kids that worn nice clothes, drove nice cars, and had all the pretty lady’s. They both was gangs in Oklahoma. The Socs they would jump Greasers, wreck houses, and throw beer blasts for kicks.
The book “the Outsiders” (S.E. Hinton) is based on the story of two gangs the Greasers and the Socs. These two groups of individuals have conflicts. the Greasers are the East side working class people. The Socs are the West side rich kids. they drive around in a blue mustang, they “jump” the greasers and injure them purely because they are lesser than the Socs. The Greasers are a interesting bunch of individuals. the story is based from their perspective. They aren’t rich but they get by, they steal they fight they smoke but they aren’t bad guys.
One reason that the Greasers are a disgrace to society was because of their looks. From just looking at them you could tell that they meant mischief. Greasers were not the average group of kids; they were hoodlums. When speaking of how the townspeople viewed Greasers, Ponyboy says, "But most looked at us like we were dirt"(15). Greasers wore their hair long, dressed in blue jeans and T-Shirts and left their shirttails out and wore leather jackets, and tennis shoes or boots. They are below middle class and look like they are always trying to steal something, due to
The Outsiders, an enthralling novel by S.E Hinton, is an excellent story about the hardships and triumphs experienced by the Greasers and the Socs two rival gangs. S.E Hinton tells a thrilling tale about the Socs and the Greasers that are two gangs and she characterize how they live. Ponyboy, his brother and his friends have to deal with the challenges relating to their environment. The three most important topics of The Outsiders are survival, social class and family support.
The Socs were just trying to get under Ponyboy’s skin because he isn’t friends with them, and the Socs just want to get him mad. “Hey, grease. One said… We’re gonna do you a favor, greaser. We’re gonna cut all that long greasy hair off.” They threatened him for being a Greaser and this shows how they don’t like Greasers. The quote shows that Soc’s bully the greasers for being poor and having trashy hair. The Socs are basically just pestering and taunting him for no reason except for he’s not one of their kind and he’s poor and a
2. The title of this book relates to the story, because in the book, Ponyboy and Johnny are “outsiders.” They can be thought of as Outsiders because they are labeled Greasers although they do not act like hoodlums, like the rest of the Greasers. They are thought of as Greasers just because they live on the East Side of town, and because they slick back their hair. But Ponyboy and Johnny are different then all of the other Greasers because they show their emotions, and are sensitive.
In the book The Outsiders, written by S.E. Hinton, Ponyboy, along with his brothers and friends, has to face the daily struggles of being a greaser among the Socs. This fiction book focused on Ponyboy’s life and the problems he ran into with the Socs. He and his gang of friends had fights with the Socs that happened often, and had to deal with a Soc being killed by one of the Greasers, though it was an act of self defense. The three topics addressed in this intriguing novel are the fight between rich and poor, the power of friendship, and what it means to be a hero.
"The Outsiders" is a story that deals with a conflict between two gangs, the "Greasers" from the East Side of town and the "Socs" from the east-side of town. This is a story that is told in the first person. Ponyboy Curtis is the one telling the story. Here is a summary of the story.
The Outsiders is a novel by S.E Hinton, that follows a young boy named Ponyboy who grows up in a gang. Johnny, Sodapop and Darry help him find how he fits into the world and without them he would have a hard time finding his own identity. Without having a close group of friends he would have a tough way of life, especially with the Socs. Being in a group that you associate with, that have different values to yourself can lead you to disregard your own ethics and do things you wouldn’t normally do, but at the same time this can assist and reinforce your own values…
The Outsiders was written by Susan Eloise Hinton. It is one of her most popular books about foolish gang rivalry existing between the Socs, the rich kids from the west side of town, and the Greasers, the poor kids from the east side.
The Outsiders is about the life of a 14-year-old boy. The book tells the story of Ponyboy “Curtis” and his struggles with right and wrong in a society in which he believes that he is an outsider. Ponyboy and his two brothers, Darrel (Darry), who is 20, and Sodapop, who is 16, have recently lost their parents in an automobile accident. Pony and Soda are allowed to stay under Darry's guardianship as long as they all behave themselves. The boys are greasers, a class term that refers to the young men on the East Side, the poor side of town. The greasers' rivals are the Socs, short for Socials, who are the "West-side rich kids."
This book showed the struggle between rich and poor. The two main groups of the story were the Socs and the greasers. The Socs are in the upper class while the greasers are the poor ones that dislike the Socs because they have more money, better cars, and act like they are better than the greasers. The Outsiders is a good story by S.E. Hinton that shows the struggles of growing up Hinton did a fine job with the character development, the plot, and the theme with a few flaws.
First of all, Socs and greasers have a stereotype, Socs have Mustangs, Madras, and leather jackets; Greasers have greasy hair. These clues show that they are a group and do everything together. When Ponyboy said “Our hair labeled us greasers, too – it was our trademark. The one thing we were proud of. Maybe we couldn't have Corvairs and Madras suits, but we could have hair” (Hinton 71) This line in the book illustrates that what they have in their
The differences between them are differences between everyone, but they have managed to make them so distinct that rivalry seems like the only choice. The greasers see the socs with their expensive cars and fancy clothing, but are completely ignorant to the hardships in the socs' life, the greasers are left feeling envious but at the end they all have problems in their life, only, some are more visible than others. Ponyboy feels that the greasers have stereotypes that they have to abide by, even though these "criminals" once saved kids from a fire, they are referred to as a menace to society. This is an unfair title especially when it applies to everyone in the group. Exactly like that, Cherry, a soc who hates violence and enjoys the simple things in life like sunsets, is the complete opposite of the image the greasers hold of her. Both classes are weighed down by the standards and the criteria designated to each of them, and they both are trudging through difficult waters maintaining their individual identity when society tells them otherwise. They are so invested in keeping both classes separate, that they don't realize they both are going through the same thing, and that the conflict between them is unnecessary. Both classes