Category Archives: The Outsiders

Group D: Final Project , Shatavia, Jeleah, Kye, Angel

What:  For our group project we are going to create a scrapbook.  A scrapbook is a book of blank pages for sticking clippings, drawings, or pictures in.  The scrapbook is going to be designed exactly how we think Jefferson, Grant, or a character from the book would create it.  We will be filling up the scrapbook with Jefferson’s important memories, moments, recipes, and his time in jail.  In order to do this, we will be looking for symbols in magazines, things from the internet, clippings in newspapers and physical objects.  Being in jail and confined to one place causes a person to use their imagination.  Similar to Jefferson and Grant they are both trapped in situations that cause them to do a lot of imagining and thinking.  Something our group will be doing in order to create the perfect scrapbook that represents “A Lesson Before Dying”.

 

Why: In the book “A Lesson before Dying” a lot of the book has to do with symbols and teaching.  Jefferson is being taught a lesson by being sentenced to death.  Grants job as a teacher is to teach and he is also asked to teach Jefferson how to become a man.  Since teaching plays a huge role in this book, the scrap book will be created to teach others about our insights, thoughts, and main ideas about the book.  We all thought it would be a good gesture to create a visual.  This way our imagination and how we views things from the book can be brought to life.

The Outsiders Close Reading

When I was just a kid, I read The Outsiders and my favorite character was Dally. His tough demeanor made me admire him a lot. Even after rereading the novel, I still think Dally was the coolest.  Throughout the book Dally is always described as mean and cold-hearted. Ponyboy often says how he likes Dally the least out of the gang. In fact, most of Dally’s interactions with other characters would almost always turn out to be negative. However, as the story goes on the reader as well as Ponyboy get to see glimpses of Dally going out of character or doing things that he normally wouldn’t do. These moments typically happen with Johnny around.

An example would be when Dally and is driving Ponyboy and Johnny when Johnny asked “I don’t guess my parents are worried about me or anything?”(87). Dally attempted to protect Johnny by saying how the boys were all worried, but when Johnny persists, Dally gets angry. “Blast it, Johnny, what do they matter? Shoot my old man don’t give a hang whether I’m in jail or dead in a car wreck or drunk in the gutter. That don’t bother me none” (88). Here we get to learn about Dally’s family for the first time, and it’s important because we never knew anything about him before except how he was in jail, fought, stole, etc. Ponyboy always said how Johnny was the gang’s pet and that’s why Dally treated him differently. From this passage we can see that Dally avoids giving the news straight to Johnny and when he does, he tries to show him how tough he is without his father’s care and how little it means to him. This moment doesn’t just show how much Dally cares about Johnny, it also draws a comparison between them. Dally had no parents’ love and it can be assumed that it was a reason he became the “cold hoodlum” he was.

Although his attitude, looks, and actions initially give off a heartless vibe, as time went on the way he treated Johnny and Ponyboy started to contradict Ponyboy’s description of him. He even went into a flaming church to save Johnny. The final evolution of Dally’s character can be seen during Johnny’s death. Before he goes in to see Johnny, he says “I was crazy, you know that, kid? Crazy for wantin’ Johnny to stay outa trouble, for not wantin’ him to get hard. If he’d been like me he’d never have been in this mess” (147). I see this as the beginning of Dally breaking down, knowing that Johnny might not make it. Even Ponyboy was confused at how he talked because “he never talked like that”. Dally goes on, “You’d better wise up Pony… you get tough like me and you don’t get hurt. You look out for yourself and nothing can touch you”(147). Dally’s words here can be seen as a front, trying to convince himself that not caring about anything is the only way to not get hurt, yet he winds up getting attached to Johnny and the opposite happens. I feel as if Dally saw Johnny as a version of himself. A boy with no one except his gang and when that one person he cared about died, he just couldn’t deal with the feelings of grief that he had. He never truly loved anyone like he loved Johnny, and when he lost him, he decided to follow suit. Dally was a tough, cold greaser. I don’t think he was one by choice. Possibly due to neglect, abuse, or situations that were out of his control, he had to become tough to survive. He really was a tragic character. One thing he wasn’t though, was heartless.

 

The Outsiders CR Reading

What does it mean to be tough? Does it mean having the strength to endure vigorous pain or to stone faced in the presence of danger? In S.E. Hinton’s The Outsiders, the main character Ponyboy explores what it means to be tough, which can be seen through a comparison of how he handles hostile Socs near the beginning of the novel and how he handles hostile Socs near the end of the novel. Both scenes contain a moment where Ponyboy must hold a broken soda bottle, but the shift in responses to the bottle provide detail on what Ponyboy had learned through the course of the novel.

In the first scene, Ponyboy, along with Johnny and Two-Bit, walk two girls Cherry and Marcia back to their homes when they are stopped by Socs in a blue mustang. In this scene Ponyboy shows his immaturity by dropping the bottle given to him by Two-Bit. Hinton writes, “I pulled her to one side. ‘I couldn’t use this,’ I said, dropping the pop bottle. ‘I couldn’t ever cut anyone…” I had to tell her [Cherry] that because I’d seen her eyes when Two-Bit flicked out his switch” (47). Ponyboy’s actions reflect an attempt to preserve the image of goodness Cherry sees in Ponyboy and in Johnny. While it is good that Ponyboy remains non-violent, given that this event occurs in the immature phase of the hero, Hinton is showing the audience that it’s bad since he can’t protect himself from danger .Even though he say “I could never cut anyone,” one should see that over time he at least becomes capable of know he could through observing someone as kind and pure like Johnny kill a Soc.

At a later scene, where Ponyboy is confronted by Socs after Johnny’s death, Ponyboy exhibits a new look on life. In this moment, it is Ponyboy alone fending off Socs and he breaks the bottle rather than receiving it from Two-Bit. Here Ponyboy shows to pull out references to tough people he knew in his life. He says, “I started toward them, holding the bottle the way Tim Shepard holds a switch—out and away from myself, in a loose but firm hold” (171). He also says the phrase “Get smart and nothing can touch you” (171), words taken from his late friend Dally, described as being one in the same as Shepard in the novel. Ponyboy, by making reference from them, see value in who they are as characters. Dally was a character born without a parents love and raised partly on the streets of New York and what Ponyboy derives from Dally is getting stronger than the world can hit you. This kind of toughness is exhibited in the same scene as Ponyboy says, “I didn’t feel anything—scared, mad, or anything. Just zero (171).” Ponyboy learns that toughness is a hard acceptance of your reality, not a perpetuation of an ignorance to one’s conditions.

After the Socs back away from Ponyboy, he shows that he hasn’t turned completely into Dally by his action of picking up the broken pieces, saying that he “didn’t want anyone to get a flat tire” (172).  Ponyboy exhibits here the goodness that distinguished him from other greasers as described by Cherry.

From these two scenes, Hinton shows the audience Ponyboy’s transformation and hope. Ponyboy like the pop bottle was broken after being subjected to incredible conflicts, but that experience made him jagged to defend himself without breaking him completely.