How could two juvenile delinquents who share many differences and similarities have such a solid friendship? In the novel The Outsiders, written by S.E. Hinton, Dallas Winston and Johnny cade are very different, but besides their differences they have a special bond. Although they have differences such as advice giving, and rule following, they also have similarities like comparable parents and their concern for each other.
Johnny and Dally have many similarities, especially their family lives and how they are treated at home. The two greasers have neglectful, and abusive parents. In the novel, Dally does not acknowledge his mother at all and he only mentions his once and not to say kind words about him. The one time Dallas tells Johnny about
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Especially Dally looks after Johnny because he loves Johnny. Dally understands the struggle Johnny is going through with his parents, making him connected to Johnny. Dallas is tough and hard, however he takes care of Johnny like he’s his younger brother. When Johnny passes away, Pony realizes, “Johnny was the only thing Dally loved” (152). Pony is surprised that Dally can’t handle Johnny’s death because Dally has been through a lot of hardship and poverty in his life. Dallas is older, wiser, and tougher than Ponyboy, who is fourteen however, Dally only loves Johnny and he can’t accept his death. Likewise, Johnny cares about Dally more than anyone in the group. When they are at the drive in movie, Johnny stands up to Dally while he is harassing Cherry and Marcia. Dally doesn’t hit Johnny, proving he loves him very much. Surprisingly, Johnny talked back to Dally even though Johnny is timid and Dally is his idol. Pony watches in shock and thinks, “Johnny worshiped the ground Dally walked on, and I had never heard Johnny talk back to anyone, much less his hero” (25). Johnny only wants the best for Dally and it is hard for him to see his role model make bad decisions. The two greasers wouldn’t be able to live without each other because they are so attached to each
Johnny , Ponyboy and Dallas also possessed specific interpersonal skills like openness and empathy which can be clearly seen in the scenes where they rescue the kids from the burning church without thinking about the consequences. They valued others life more than theirs that they were ready to sacrifice their own lives for saving the children. Their selfless sacrifice is evident in the scene, where while turning the pages of Johnny's copy of ‘Gone with the Wind’, Ponyboy finds a letter from Johnny saying that saving the children was worth sacrificing his own life. To conclude, the story of ‘The Outsiders’ is inspiring and it contains violence and strong language. I think its themes and conflicts are highly valuable as they still address many of the issues in the modern world. This film’s realistic portrayal has created a new kind of filmmaking which portrays poor teenagers from the wrong side of the tracks .I feel it is an easier way to lead the new generation in the right track through this effective form of communication. The movie also uses various elements and principles of interpersonal communication in many scenes. It would be a good action movie for the young generation to watch as they are mainly related to the realities rather than fantasy that
The Outsiders was about the greasers and the Socs. The Socs always jump the greasers, one day Johnny fights back, he ends up killing Bob. Johnny and Ponyboy run away to a church and hide until Dally comes and gets them. They then see the church was burning, Ponyboy and Johnny run into it to save the kids inside. Johnny and Dally get injured, Ponyboy is okay. The greasers win the rumble, the Socs will stay out of the greasers territory, Johnny passes away from his injuries, Dally robs a store, the police shoot him, and he does not survive the shots. In the end Ponyboy decides to regather his life and he starts with writing his theme for his ELA class. The book The Outsiders book, the
My best friend, Marcia, and I had met Johnny and Ponyboy minutes ago when their buddy was trying to pick me up. He might have been successful too, if it wasn’t for them. Dally seemed a lot like my boyfriend, Bob, only the greaser version. Just like Bob, he seemed like the type that doesn’t fear anything, a free spirit, yet underneath that, he was thriving for something greater that would finally satisfy him. I could tell he’d been through a lot.
Dally and Johnny may be very different, but they have extremely important similarities. For example, both of these characters place very little value on their lives. Dally is first arrested at the age of ten and he loves to break
Although Dally and Johnny share some alike traits, they also have many differences. For example, Dally is a tenacious, villainous, and a greaser while Johnny is a polite, perceptive, and craven greaser.
In the letter that Johnny left for Ponyboy,“‘There's still a lot of good in the world. Tell Dally. I don’t think he knows’” (179). The note Johnny left for Ponyboy to tell Dally, but it was too late for that. Ponyboy says, “Johnny worshipped the ground Dallas walked on”(25). This shows that Johnny is just Dally’s pet. Johnny knows that Dally cares about him but he does not show it because is a tough person. All in all, Both characters care for each other.
A similarity Johnny and Dally both share is a terrible home life. Early in the novel, Ponyboy dissects Johnny’s homelife. Pony says, “His father was always beating him up, and his mother ignored him, except when she was
Even the younger boys like Soda and Pony are much more sensitive in nature but still eager to prove themselves in the “rumble” towards the end of the novel. Physical combat seems to carry weight similar to ancient rites of passage, you were only considered a man if you could best another in a trial by arms or “lick” someone as the boys of the 1960’s would say. This is an important distinction to notice and deserves further inspection. Even with the loss of their biological parents to death, alcoholism, marital strife or pure apathy, these boys take care of one another with each older generation raising the younger, Dally even comments to Johnny about the nature of their relationship when he inquires about whether his parents cared about his well-being, “’My parents… did they ask about me?’ ‘No,’ snapped Dally, they didn’t. 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.’” (Outsiders 88). Whether Dally is completely aware of the role he plays in Johnny’s life is unclear but it adds all the more weight to the revelation of Johnny’s death; for Dally, this is losing a son. There is a solid argument to make that, in spite of their personal hardships, these boys are far more adjusted to masculinity than their counterparts the “Socs” who seem to be aimless in their pursuit of
The book, and the movie, “the Outsiders” is about a conflict between greasers and socs. Up until the point where Johnny kills a soc, there are mostly only small fights and arguments between the two. The story “the Outsiders” takes place in the 1960’s, when there were two main lifestyles. Greasers and Socs. Greasers are known for greasing their hair. Socs are rich kids who have good clothes, drive mustangs, and always have an argument against the greasers. The main character in S. E. Hinton’s book “the Outsiders” is Ponyboy Curtis. He has two older brothers Darry and Soda. Pony is 14 years old and his best friend, Johnny, is 16 years old. S. E. Hinton wrote “the Outsiders” when she was 17 years old. Her book was published in 1967. The
Picture having a mother who does not care and is neglectful. Imagine getting shot by cops or burned in a fire. Johnny Cade and Dallas Winston, two characters from S.E. Hinton’s The Outsiders, are similar in some ways and different in others. Johnny and Dally have similarities as they both have abusive, neglectful parents and place little value on their lives. Despite these similarities they also have differences as they give different advice to Ponyboy another greaser from The Outsiders before Johnny dies a hero and Dally dies a Gallant. In the end Johnny and Dally have similarities and differences.
Johnny and Dally have many similarities and differences. In The Outsiders by S.E. Hilton two of the main characters have many similarities and differences. For example a similarity is how both Johnny and Dally have abusive parents who pay no attention to them. Another example is how they both place little value in their own lives. A difference is how Dally is tough and Johnny is sensitive. Also how Johnny is the most law abiding of all the greasers and Dally has a police record a mile long. Johnny and Dally both have immense similarities and drastic differences.
When Johnny asking about his family Dally replies, “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” (Hinton 107). Similarly to Johnny, Dally does not have good life in his family either. Instead of desperately wanting love from his family members, Dally does not care about his family and his father does not care either. Ponyboy is introducing Dally by saying, “Dally had spent three years on the wild side of New York and had been arrested at the age of ten. He was tougher than the rest of us- tougher, colder, meaner” (Hinton 13). To clarify, Dally had gone through tough situations that made him tough and he was not afraid of anyone. This transformed him into a person who was hardened and had lost most of his innocence. The moment Dally died, Ponyboy said surely, “He died violent and young and desperate, just like we all knew he’d die someday” (Hinton 187). To put it in another way, Dally asked for death because he could not face the truth of Johnny’s death. Different from Johnny, Dally did not die in piece, where as this death was caused by mourning over Johnny. In conclusion, Dally’s family background had a significant impact throughout his life on his hardened personality and his perspective toward
Dally and Johnny share correspondence within their family life. For example, the two characters both are either abused by or neglected from their parents.
One of the biggest losses the Greasers experienced was the death of Johnny, being one of the youngest in the gang he was like a younger brother to most of the Greaser gang and his death put a toll on the hearts of his close friends. After a fire Johnny was seriously injured and puts into a hospital, later on his death was announced to the gang. Although his passing puts all of his friends in a state of sorrow, it especially affected Ponyboy and Dally. Ponyboy, the only member of the gang that was younger than Johnny, took the passing of his death hard. Ponyboy even denied the death of Johnny. After Johnny's death Ponyboy, lost in his thoughts, states . “Johnny was dead. But he wasn't. That still body back in the hospital wasn't Johnny. Johnny was somewhere else..” (S.E Hinton page 150 ) Ponyboy didn't even resist accepting the death of his parent, but Johnny was different. Johnny was Ponyboy's best friend and the only person he could tell everything to. Making his death a hard one to overcome. But once he did it gave him the opportunity to grow so much. Once he accepted it, he was able to tell people his story and then to write his book. Although Ponyboy was able to grow from the death of Johnny, Dally wasn't. He's a good example of what not letting go of the things you love can do. After Johnny's death, Dally is broken. He was a mix of sorrow, and anger. Anger not only at himself, because he wasn't able to save Johnny, but anger also at Johnny for risking his life for others. Dally
In The Outsiders, there are a lot of main and magnificent characters. Some of the characters I enjoy in this book were Ponyboy Curtis, Johnny Cade, and Dally Winston. I picked these 3 characters because even though they are tough greasers