Jane vs. Phoebe?

Throughout The Catcher in the Rye, Holden repeatedly expresses his idealization of purity and innocence of childhood and hatred for the phoniness of adulthood. Holden defines purity as untainted by adulthood’s corruption and phoniness. In Holden’s four days wandering in the streets of New York City, he dismisses almost everyone he meets as phony for their hypocrisy, vanity, conceit, or whatever it may be. Among the few free from his criticisms are Jane Gallagher and his sister, Phoebe Caulfield. While they are both emotional support for Holden, he classifies them into very different roles in his psychological world. Jane symbolizes Holden’s attachment to the lost, idealized childhood, while Phoebe emerges as a living guiding force grounding him in the mental breakdown.

Jane is Holden’s close childhood friend and neighbor. Throughout the book, Jane exists entirely in Holden’s memory, frozen and unattainable in the ideal past. Holden idealizes Jane for her innocence and childishness. In Holden’s description of Jane to Stradlater, Holden recalls how “she wouldn’t move any of her kings” when they played checkers (Salinger 31). Strategically, the tactic is terrible. Yet, Jane’s stubbornness is the exact proof of her sacred innocence. She plays not for victory and competition, but for the preservation of her love and little quirks. Holden sees Jane as untainted by adult desire for competition and success. While wandering on NYC streets, Holden repeatedly mentions calling Jane, but he never follows through. This behavior reveals his fear that his innocent Jane may be corrupted by the adult world. The fear starts back when Holden anxiously presses on Stradlater after his date with Jane to find out if anything “dirty” happened between them (43). Stradlater never gave Holden an explicit answer, which leaves him growing unsettled that his Jane was desecrated by unworthy people. The lack of reconnection between Holden and Jane symbolizes how one could never return to childhood. Jane, like childhood itself, only exists in memories and not reality. 

Alternatively, Phoebe, Holden’s ten-year-old sister, is the living epitome of innocence. Unlike Jane, who is frozen in memories, Phoebe exists fully in the present, allowing her to actively engage with Holden. A concrete example of Phoebe’s innocence is the honesty in her speech. Phoebe never escapes or embellishes truth. When Holden confides to her about his frustration with Pencey and life, she cuts straight through his flowery language and points out his depression, stating, “You don’t like anything that’s happening (169).” This comment almost lands as blunt and cruel, but Holden recognizes that it is exactly this unfiltered honesty that separates her from the phony adults. Therefore, her criticisms become actually valuable for Holden. This allows Phoebe to become Holden’s life anchor and emotional lighthouse. She listens to his complaints, challenges his cynicism, and forces him to reflect on his life. Phoebe’s persistence guides Holden to uncomfortably identify his values and ultimately avoid being left in the turmoil of depression and disgust. 

In short, Jane is the materialized version of Holden’s values and Phoebe represents that value grounding him in action. Salinger shows that pure values are insufficient to salvage one from depression and mental illnesses. Only living connections to values and love can pull one back from the cliff. 

(Note: I realize Allie also falls perfectly into this category, but I didn’t include him because originally I wanted to articulate some specialness of Jane and Phoebe both as female characters. Sadly, I didn’t really find a way to express that.)

Thank you for reading! Any feedback is appreciated :D
Toodles!

Works Cited:
Salinger, J.D. The Catcher in the Rye. Little Brown and Company, 1945.

Comments

  1. I like the idea of Phoebe being Holden's "emotional lighthouse". As much as Jane is an important and positive figure for Holden, she's a memory to him. He can't bring himself to interact with Jane because of the fear of her innocence being corrupted, but Phoebe is still an "un-corrupted" figure that is able to tell him what he *really* needs to hear. Great blog!

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  2. I enjoyed the contrast between phoebe and Jane. They both represent innocence and bring joy to him. However, they both have different influences on holden. Phoebe has a greater impact on him due to their reinforced relationship and status.

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  3. I had the same thought while reading the book--that Jane feels more like an idealized memory than an actual person in Holden's present life, while Phoebe is a living, breathing form of that innocence. Jane represents something Holden wants to preserve by keeping it untouched, which is why he never actually ends up reaching out to her. I liked how you used the phrase "emotional lighthouse" for Phoebe; it captures how she doesn't just comfort Holden but is continuously guiding him.

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