In
the excerpt from the novel Catcher in the
Rye by J. D. Salinger, Salinger’s slightly vulgar, familiar diction
depicts
the ill-educated, juvenility of the narrator. At first, the character
introduces the
reader to the point of the passage. The character “[doesn’t] feel like going through all
that crap” of
describing his
life and “what [his] lousy childhood was like” because he is a lazy
youth and possibly has poor writing skills if he must rely on vulgar
words. Words such as “damn
near” and “crap” are straight from the vulgar lexicon of immature
teenage youth, hence emphasizing the narrator’s juvenility. Then the teen bounces
around topics from an
autobiographical style to the purpose of his writing to randomness about
his
brother, “D.B” who’s “in Hollywood without describing them very well.
That isn’t too far from [the narrator’s]
crumby place.” The vulgarity of the familiar diction highlights the
juvenility
of the undereducated narrator.
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