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Outsiders Analysis

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Outsiders Analysis Chapter 4 Internal Monologue and Dialect One of the distinguishing characteristics of Hinton's prose is its effort to faithfully replicate a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Outsiders Analysis


1
Outsiders Analysis
  • Chapter 4

2
Internal Monologue and Dialect
  • One of the distinguishing characteristics of
    Hinton's prose is its effort to faithfully
    replicate a certain way of speaking and writing
    among "tough" youths.
  • Ponyboy's role as narrator casts the proceedings
    and colors the language what emerges is a
    specific vernacular.
  • At points, his narration borders on stream of
    consciousness.
  • In this chapter, the repetition of certain lines
    lends the reader the impression of drifting
    inside Ponyboy's head.
  • For example, after Ponyboy realizes Johnny has
    killed Bob, Hinton writes (or Ponyboy thinks)
    "This can't be happening. This can't be
    happening. This can't be..." He is dizzy, so the
    thought trails off.

3
Theme Eyes
  • Eyes are prominent in this chapter, and
    especially Johnny's.
  • As the five Soc boys approach him and Ponyboy,
    "his eyes were wild-looking, like the eyes of an
    animal in a trap."
  • After Bob calls the boys "White trash with long
    hair," Ponyboy notices that Johnny's "eyes were
    smoldering."
  • When Ponyboy comes to after almost being drowned,
    he notes Johnny's expression, fresh from Bob's
    kill "his eyes were huger than I'd ever seen
    them.

4
Theme Appearances
  • The theme of appearances comes into play when the
    Socs approach Johnny and Ponyboy the two young
    boys try to look tough. "Johnny had a blank,
    tough look on his face - you'd have had to know
    him to see the panic in his eyes. I stared at the
    Socs coolly. Maybe they could scare us to death,
    but we'd never let them have the satisfaction of
    knowing."
  • Later, when the boys are going to ask for
    directions to Jay Mountain, Ponyboy sees Johnny
    "as a stranger might see him," and realizes that
    they will never pass for farm boys. He thinks,
    "They'll know we're hoods the minute they see
    us.

5
Theme Dreaming
  • Dreaming of the country segues into a
    disappointing reality when the boys jump off the
    train in Windrixville.
  • Ponyboy notices that "the clouds were pink and
    meadowlarks were singing," and thinks to himself
    that finally he has arrived in the country.
  • But later, as he looks for someone to ask
    directions, he thinks to himself, "I was in the
    country, but I knew I wasn't going to like it as
    much as I'd thought I would.

6
Theme Dreaming/Pretending
  • Linked to the theme of dreaming of the country is
    that of pretending, which Ponyboy does to escape
    situations he can't deal with.
  • The line between "pretending" and "lying" is
    blurred both come easily to Ponyboy.
  • "I can lie so easily that it spooks me
    sometimes," he concedes.
  • It's both a boast and a confession, and, indeed,
    a sense of guilt permeates his descriptions of
    his own dreams and his own ruses.

7
Foreshadowing
  • The end of the chapter includes a bit of
    foreshadowing, when Ponyboy says that "this
    church gave me a kind of creepy feeling. What do
    you call it? Premonition?"
  • Here, with these questions, Hinton uses the
    technique of direct address, when the narrator
    speaks to the reader personally.
  • The foreshadowing is self-conscious, since
    Ponyboy makes a point of calling it a
    premonition.
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