Preview

What Is Johnny Cade's Cycle Of Violence In The Outsiders

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
221 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
What Is Johnny Cade's Cycle Of Violence In The Outsiders
In 1967, S. E. Hinton wrote the novel 'The Outsiders' when she was just seventeen. It is somewhat autobiographical in the sense that she based it on two groups of teenagers in her school: The Socs and The Greasers. The Socs are rich kids who have it made and jump Greasers for fun, whilst the Greasers are of low-socioeconomic status and are assumed to be hoods. This essay aims to show what kind of influence violence has on the characters using Dallas (Dally) Winston and Johnny Cade as examples.

Johnny Cade's cycle of violence at home, with his physically and verbally abusive parents as well as well as constantly getting jumped and beat up by the Socs, changes his personality and makes him timid and afraid. This behaviour leads him to carry

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Of all of the characters in The Outsiders I relate the most to Johnny because he is sweet and quiet, but when it comes to my friends I would do anything for them. I think Johnny and I connect to him because we come off as nice and would not hurt a fly, but everyone has something or someone they would die or kill for and Johnny and I would both kill for our friends. I think Johnny is so content because he has a lot of things happened to him though. Like someone jumped him and his parents are really mean to him. I don't have that in my life, well not as bad and nothing to do with my family. But a lot of things have happened to make me so quiet and content, like Johnny. All and all I think that I am very much like Johnny.…

    • 150 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    As Laurell K. Hamilton, a famous American fantasy writer, once said, “There are wounds that never show on the body that are deeper and more hurtful than anything that bleeds.” This quote directly applies to the little-dark-puppy-kicked-too-many-times character named Johnny Cade from S.E. Hinton’s timeless novel The Outsiders, who has both mental and physical scars from his horrific beating at the hands of the Socs -which not only linger upon his skin, but also penetrate his heart. In chapter two of this engaging and teen-centered novel, we dig deeper into the past of Johnny Cade’s life, thanks in part to a captivating first-person flashback from Johnny’s fellow Greaser, Ponyboy Curtis. While Ponyboy and his fresh friend Cherry Valance, a Soc…

    • 254 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Outsiders Summary

    • 588 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The book starts with the narrator and co-protagonist, Ponyboy Curtis, the youngest member of the Greasers (Lower class) going back home after an outdoor movie night. He is encountered by one of the Socs (Higher class), and attacked until his gang arrives to help. The Greasers and Socs need no other party’s provocation to fight. The next day, the Greasers visit the movie theatre once again and find Soc’s girlfriends hanging out. After a failed attempt by the older members of the Greasers to flirt with them, Ponyboy unprecedentedly succeeds in a long-talk and escorts them to the girls’ home, only to encounter the Soc’s, who are extremely mad. Fortunately, the girls stop the fight and Ponyboy runs back home, where Dally is waiting anxiously for him. Dally is extremely mad by the fact that such a young boy like…

    • 588 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “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.…

    • 971 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Robert Renfroe, better known as Bob Riley once said, “Hard times don't create heroes. It is during hard times when the ‘hero’ within us is revealed”. In The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton, Johnny Cade is a 16-year-old Greaser with long and greasy ebony hair covering his forehead. He has dark pusillanimous eyes and a scar that runs from his forehead to his cheekbone. Johnny is portrayed as an abused boy who was emotionally and physically traumatized, but throughout the novel, it is revealed that he is a gallant individual who is willing to risk his life for others.…

    • 467 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    I have read and watched the Outsiders and now I think about it sometimes and the first person who comes up in my mind is Johnny. Johnny, a character in the “The Outsiders” by S.E Hinton has to get through hard times in the bad streets and gangs of Tulsa,Oklahoma. He was unfortunately unable to survive the hard times and ends up passing away. He was happy for what he died for after saving kids in a burning church. Johnny scared,uneasy, and intuitive ways make him forever remembered in the Outsiders.…

    • 446 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The film Boyz ‘n the Hood, directed by John Singleton is more than just a Hollywood blockbuster. The film incorporates numerous criminological theories and also demonstrates the concepts of conformity and deviance. This paper will analyze the characters of Tre, Ricky, Doughboy, Furious and other friends and family and show how criminological theories and the concepts of conformity and deviance play a part in their lives.…

    • 1007 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Outsiders is a story about kids that need to be loved and supported. An example of someone who was not loved and supported was Johnny who was a Greaser. He was not loved at all and…

    • 684 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout S.E Hinton's The Outsiders Bad decisions lead to regret later on. In The Outsiders, There are two gangs The Socs, and The Greasers, neither groups get along. The Socs are rich, and they drive nice cars, the greasers are opposite they are poor, and drive beat up old cars. One night two Greasers Johnny, and Ponyboy get into a fight with The Socs. Johnny ends up killing a soc. Johnny, and Ponyboy get money from a gang member, and hide in a church. The church caught on fire when the two boys went out for lunch. The two boys ran into the church to save the little children that were in it. Johnny gets badly hurt, and a week later he dies. His brother couldn't handle the fact that Johnny had passed away, and points an unloaded gun at the cops, and gets shot the he immediately dies. During S.E Hinton's The Outsiders the theme “it’s rough all over” is shown by the tragic events, and struggles throughout the story.…

    • 703 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Johnny Cade, the sympathetic and lovable character from the classical realistic fiction novel “The Outsides” by renowned author S.E. Hinton is one of the most complex and confusing characters in the novel. Johnny is a very special character because he is so different in so many ways to the other protagonists in this novel. He himself who is both quiet and passive is forced to take refuge with the violent and active gang of the greasers by his abusive family. Throughout the novel he is the main catalysis of most of the major events in the novel, through his small acts of courage, he leads both himself and Ponyboy into a whirlwind of adventure including murder, death and heroism making him one of the most loved character of the novel. One of the…

    • 1877 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Believe it or not, everyone is an outsider; moreover so are you. “The Outsiders”, a novel written by S.E Hinton, took place in the 1960’s Tulsa, Oklahoma. When Hinton was 17 years old, out of anger she wrote this book about the differences between two unique teenage social groups: the greasers and the Soc (Doc A). She illustrates that the outsiders are the people who stand out from the rest of society by thought or action. Both the greasers and the Soc can be considered outsiders, but as the story goes on, we realize the real outsiders are the ones who can see each individual in the groups for who they really are.…

    • 511 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Johnny Cade, from the book The Outsiders, lost his innocence in numerous ways such as having to endure getting abused for years by his parents, getting beat up the Socs, and feeling the pain of ending someone’s life. Johnny lives in a home that is rough and unsafe, which drastically impacted all of his life decisions and choices. As a result of all of these choices, he’s thrust into a life that many people don’t understand, and encounters many life-changing dilemmas that cause him to grow up and lose his naiveness. An example of this is when he gets jumped by the Socs, so he promises to hurt the next person who tries to hurt him, which he ends up doing. Once he kills Bob, he loses what little innocence he had left and sees the world in a different,…

    • 185 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Heroism In The Outsiders

    • 449 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The author Robert Fanney once said, “I cannot change what will happen. I can only change how I act in the face of it.” In The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton there are two groups Soc’s and Greasers. Greasers were the poor ones, always getting into trouble. The Soc’s were the rich and had nice cars/outfits. Soc’s and Greasers never got along and always fought. During the story the greasers start to realize things they have never realized before like how everything is rough all over. Johnny and Dally show examples of heroism throughout the story.…

    • 449 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Sodapop - the Outsiders

    • 1283 Words
    • 6 Pages

    In S.E Hinton's novel, The Outsiders, there are many themes represented in the book, but one of the main themes is social ostracism, or the conflict between the economic classes. There are two rival gangs within The Outsiders: the Socs and the Greasers. The Socs represent the upper class while the Greasers represent the lower class. The Socs, "jump greasers and wreck houses and throw beer blasts for kicks, and get editorials in the paper for being a public disgrace one day and an asset to society the next." The Greasers, who are on the low social economic side, "steal things and drive old souped-up cars and hold up gas stations and have a gang fight once in a while." The conflict between the rich and the poor goes even further than economics and goes to values too. This is said through Cherry, herself a member of the Socs. "You greasers have a different set of values. You're more emotional. We're sophisticated—cool to the point of not feeling anything." As you can see, these two groups are divided by these differences. In this conflict of this gang, there is Sodapop Curtis, a greaser. Ponyboy’s happy-go-lucky, handsome "movie-star good looking" brother. Sodapop is 16 years old and the middle Curtis boy of the family. Ponyboy envies Sodapop’s good looks and charm. His best friend is Steve Randle, has been his best friend since grade school. Sodapop plans to marry Sandy, a greaser girl. His two brothers, Darry and Ponyboy Curtis, who are also greasers. They are on the lower end of economics and they have to work very hard for money to keep up a house and support Ponyboy through school (Darry and Soda both quit). Sodapop gave up his education to work at a DX gas station and uses the money he makes (though not much) to support the family. As Sodapop is a greaser, he is a part of the conflict of the gangs, getting into fights/rumbles at times. In S.E Hinton's novel, The Outsiders,…

    • 1283 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    One common theme The Outsiders and the news article share violence among youth. In The Outsiders, the main character, Ponyboy, is involved in a local gang. Throughout the novel, he indicates his reluctance in participation with this gang; but does do out of a need for loyalty and safety. “By then I figured the gang was coming to rescue me” (Hinton 6). Hinton was able to display reluctance through this small tidbit. The article is not able to use this type of characterization, due to its informational nature. However, it can display violence as a group dynamic, as shown in this quote, “In a crowds as dense as that at Brighton control could not be easily contained, and fights and rowdiness continued sporadically” (Lapping). The violence is shown as a large theme of the story, and is displayed with informational writing.…

    • 459 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays