Who was the one to cause the predicaments that the Greasers had to go through?The Outsiders is not a true story, but makes the reader feel like it was real. The main character, Ponyboy, is part of a gang named the Greasers. Conflicts sparked between the Greasers and their enemies, the Socs or Socials. Ponyboy, Darry, Dally, Sodapop, Two-bit and Johnny went through obstacles and problems caused by the Socs. Throughout the book, The Outsiders, there were many problems and conflicts that the Greasers had to go through because of the Soc’s imprudent decisions.…
Both The perks of being a wallflower and The Outsiders establish a controlling idea about conformity. An influence involving a change in belief or behavior in order to fit in with a group. The author Stephen Chbosky in The perks of being a wallflower discusses conformity when he writes “ We got to the house where the part was, and Patrick did his secret knock.” Here the author wants the reader to know that Charlie begins to feels peer pressure placed on him, because to follow his friends would make him more integrated. The author S.E Hinton in The Outsiders discusses conformity when she writes “ We beat the Socs.” This quote reveals that as a greasers they were conformist with winning the rumble and still have separated territories which…
“...it was too late to tell them that there was still good in it…” ( S.E Hinton 179). Do Socs really have it worse than The Greasers? In the story “The Outsiders” By: S.E Hinton, there are two groups who don’t get along and fight all the time.…
The Outsiders, directed by Francis Ford Coppola was released in 1983. Ponyboy Curtis (C. Thomas Howell) is a greaser whose parents were killed in a car accident. He and his friends: Johnny (Ralph Macchio), Dally (Matt Dillon), Two-Bit (Emilio Estevez), and Steve (Tom Cruise), and brothers, Darry (Patrick Swayze) and Soda (Rob Lowe), are always getting in fights with a gang called the Socs. One night, best friend Johnny, are attacked by Socs. The Socs almost drown Ponyboy, and Johnny, defending Ponyboy, stabs Bob (a Soc). Pony, and Johnny find a church to hide out in. A bunch of little kids are trapped inside the church which caught on fire, and Pony, Johnny, and Dally save them. Ponyboy gets out ok, Dally burns his arm, but a huge piece of wood falls on Johnny, breaking his back, and burning him badly. At the end, two of the greasers end up losing their life and both gangs still fight and hate each other. I think that The Outsiders was decent, at best. Please spare yourself save the hour and…
"Greasers are like hoods; we steal things and drive old souped up cars and hold up gas stations and have a gang fight once in a while." (Hinton 6) Bob Sheldon, a Soc in the novel The Outsiders by S.E Hinton, was stabbed and killed by greaser, Johnny Cade. The greasers are considered the menace to society, because of the way they look and the actions they make. But what if I told you the only reason why 16-year old Johnny Cade stabbed Bob was because Bob and the others Socs were drowning Ponyboy... Socs are the real menaces to society because they assault and torment, they are selfish and disguise their personality with their appearance.…
This quote was memorable to me because I saw that the jurors were going to vote not guilty simply because they wanted the trial to be over. They didn’t care if the defendant was guilty or not they just wanted to leave or were tired of arguing. He’s asking that since you were chosen for jury duty , you need to respect that and give the defendant a chance.…
Ponyboy and his gang are pitted against the hateful, judging, and cruel middle class and higher. They are discriminated against because of their lack of money, and are constantly being cornered and beat up. After being cornered by the Socs, Ponyboy was asked, “You guys know what Greasers are? White trash with long greasy hair,” to which Ponyboy replies “You know what a Soc is? White trash with mustangs and madras,” this shows that the Greasers are seen as nothing more than trouble makers with slicked back hair, compared to the rich Socs (Hinton (chapter 4, paragraph 16). Once again, the Socs are “the jet set, the West-side rich kids,” and that seems like the only thing that separates the Greasers and the Socs, but the these two gangs, that is the only thing that matters (Hinton 2). In a way, this conflict was beyond the characters control. They cannot control how they are treated by others and the lives they were born into. However, Ponyboy, did in a way overcome this obstacle by becoming friends with a Soc named Cherry with whom Ponyboy has a lot in common. Although their slight friendship creates a larger conflict, it changes Ponyboy’s assumption that all Socs are the…
Being a hero is a tough duty to deal with. Not everybody can b a hero. S.E. Hinton, an author of The Outsiders, defines a hero as one who learns, changes and helps everyone. she also implies that a true hero grows emotionally. Johnny is a definite hero in The Outsiders. It is evident that Johnny grows very much and sacrifices himself for everyone - he broke a law and overcame his fear to save Ponyboy, he jumped into the burning church to save little children, and he was optimistic and caring even though he was dying. Johnny is a hero in The Outsiders for sure. Johnny is a hero, growing emotionally and acting different physically.…
“Ponyboy, listen don’t get tough. You’re not like the rest of us and don’t try to be…”-Two-bit Matthews Page 171. The Outsiders is a novel written by S.E Hinton in the 1960’s, the novel is based on a true story. The story is about Ponyboy, a teenager that belongs in the gang called Greasers. There is another gang that opposes the Greasers called the Socs. The two gangs live in two sides of Oklahoma, the Greasers being in the east, and the Socs being in the west. The Socs and the Greasers often fight each other. To society, the Greasers are low class and cause trouble, while the Socs are rich and can do no harm. Ponyboy dramatically changes throughout the novel, he starts to wonder if he should model himself to the members of his gang or follow his own path. There are three reasons to support my thesis statement.…
around me to learn to treat the people around them differently, I have to be the change.…
Lowry uses symbol in The Giver to help transmit complex ideas with few words. In The Giver the symbols Lowry is conveying are the apple and the sled. When Jonas was playing catch with Asher,“Jonas had noticed...the apple had changed” (21-22). The apple is an emblem of change. Jonas is starting to be able to “see beyond.” When Jonas saw the apple’s adjustment he started to be able to distinguish the community’s true colors. When Jonas is living the memory of the sled and snow, he goes gravitates down the hill on a red sled, “He was free to enjoy the breathless glee that overwhelmed him…”(79). As he soars down the snow on the sled he has a provoking wake up call that he could have a chance at a more superior life. The sled descending down the hill is like moving on to a new life and realizing the community is not the boundary. The community knows nothing about colors, emotions, and memories. Although the community is deep in despair without even knowing, Jonas and the Giver are able to see what the world was like before. Together they make a plan to bring the community out of the mist. They give…
While reading the Stranger I noticed a pattern of avoiding emotional words or describing events that for a normal person would have great emotional impact. ”Then I fired four more times at the motionless body where the bullets lodged without leaving a trace”(Albert 59). After reading this part of the book you could tell there was no emotion in Meursault. After killing someone you would fell some sort of emotion even if that may be hatred, remorse or fear you would think Meursault would show emotion but its like he is made of ice. Another instance of this story being strait forward in the descriptions is when Meursault is at his mother’s funeral. “Then finally she shut up. I didn’t feel drowsy anymore, but I was tired and my back was hurting…
Written by Arthur Miller, the Crucible is a reading filled with many significant and important quotes. One excerpt expresses the hidden dishonesty and deceit within the Puritan society. It says, “There are wheels within wheels in this village, and fires within fires” (28). At this part in the play, Mrs. Anne Putnam is having a dispute with Rebecca Nurse over the reasoning for her many miscarriages. Unlike Mrs. Putnam, Rebecca has been granted with plenty of children making her quite envious over Rebecca. She tries to suggest that maybe the Devil helped her have so many kids. This quote is therefore used by Mrs. Putnam to express her religious knowledge in order to help explain about this mysterious and puzzling event that has been occurring in their quaint village recently.…
Thomas Aquinas once said: “There is nothing on this earth more prized than friendship.” In another manner, it’s saying that friends will always have your back. They will always love you through thick and thin. Aquinas’s proposal is remarketing true to his novel The Outsiders written by S.E. Hinton. The Greasers, the so called town calls them, are an asset as a bunch of roughneck hoodlums. Ponyboy Curtis; Sodapop Curtis; Darrel ‘Darry’ Curtis; Dallas ‘Dally’ Winston; Keith ‘Two-bit’ Mathews are the asset group of this town. That gang is tough on the inside and outside. Friendship is the state of being friends. They’re not perfect and they make a lot of mistakes, but the make it through to each…
Tom Robinson is a no good person, he is a person of great sins, believes everybody in Maycomb except the Finches.The city of Maycomb is filled with lower/middle class citizens who all have these preconceived ideas about everyone else in the community.This eventually creates a lot of drama about everything that happens. In Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird she portrays the idea that the weight of prejudice weighs down on you the more you grow up; this becomes clear to readers the Finches, and others are forced to deal with exclusion and hatred from the people of Maycomb.…