J. D. Salinger’s Existentialist Vision in “For Esme––with Love and Squalor”

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Unlike the majority of society, Sergeant X has a heightened sense of spirituality in J. D. Salinger’s “For Esme––with Love and Squalor”. He knows that materialistic things and the petty tasks of daily life are trivial. He tries to liberate himself from the banalities of life and give his existence a meaning because he knows that life is finite. For Salinger’s misfit hero like him is having a meaningful existence is the most important goal. Like the majority of characters in Salinger’s works, the protagonist implicitly asks a “What does our existence do for us?” In his attempts to answer this question and thereby define his existence, he becomes frustrated because he is labeled as freaks or outcasts by the majority of society. He is misunderstood and underappreciated. Still the character makes a difficult struggle to get a meaning of life. By using an analogy of “the sound of one hand clapping,” Salinger shows that one form of the individual self is dominant, in most cases the social/materialistic self, and the spiritual component is ignored or overlooked in this story.
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