Jennifer Davis and Dan Schulz – culture war censorship critics, satirical storytellers, banned books defenders, and irreverent humorists exploring challenged literature and book bans
The Catcher in the Rye Ch. 16.2: The Museum That Never Changes | Banned Books Podcast
APR 2, 202632 MIN
The Catcher in the Rye Ch. 16.2: The Museum That Never Changes | Banned Books Podcast
APR 2, 202632 MIN
Description
The Catcher in the Rye Ch. 16.2 | Banned Books Comedy Podcast
Holden goes to Central Park looking for Phoebe, helps a little girl tighten her skate, walks all the way to the Museum of Natural History remembering every detail from his childhood field trips, and then does something nobody expected — he won't go inside. This is the chapter where Salinger finally shows you what the whole book is about.
Banned Camp is a comedy podcast where we read banned books chapter by chapter—we don't read ahead, so you're discovering the story with us.
Things To Listen For:
Holden asking a random kid on a bench if she knows Phoebe — and Jennifer pointing out that's the most kid move in the entire book
The skate key moment: "you could put a skate key in my hand 50 years from now in pitch dark and I'd still know what it is"
A detour into whether Trump's animatronic at Disney's Hall of Presidents was actually a repainted Hillary Clinton figure — Robot investigates
Jennifer's observation that Holden isn't what he was anymore and doesn't know what he's becoming
Dan connecting the dots: trying so hard not to be phony is its own kind of phony
The glass case passage — one of the most important paragraphs in the entire novel
Why was The Catcher in the Rye banned? Sixteen chapters in and the hosts still can't find a single thing worth banning. What they did find is a teenager standing outside a museum he used to love, unable to go in, because going in would prove he's not the same kid anymore. The real threat of this book isn't language or behavior — it's a kid admitting that growing up is terrifying, and no adult in his life has noticed.
If this is your first episode, you're fine starting here. Our fact-checking Robot catches you up fast, then we read the next chapter (spoilers).
Banworthy to Bingeworthy:
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Dateline Presents: Trace of Suspicion — A young Marine and the woman who didn't care about convention made a life together. Then one night the Marine died, and the death investigation took a wild, unexpected, and utterly bizarre turn.
MS NOW Presents: Clock It — Simone Sanders Townsend positions herself at the intersection of culture and politics, breaking down what's happening in the news so you can start to clock it too. New episodes drop Thursdays.
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Disclaimer:
Banned Camp features readings and discussions of banned books for the purpose of criticism, commentary, education, and entertainment, in accordance with fair use guidelines.
The material used from the book The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger is shared under these principles, with the intent of provoking thought and discussion about literature, censorship, and societal issues. The original work remains fully owned by its copyright holders, and we strongly encourage listeners to purchase a copy here to experience the book in its entirety.
This podcast is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or officially connected to J.D. Salinger, their estate, or the publishers of The Catcher in the Rye. Any monetization of the podcast is separate from the copyrighted material discussed.
Topics Covered: The Catcher in the Rye, J.D. Salinger, Chapter 16, Holden Caulfield, Phoebe, Sally Hayes, Central Park, Museum of Natural History, glass cases, growing up, nostalgia, identity, phoniness, Disney Hall of Presidents, banned books, banned books podcast, book banning, censorship, literary analysis, comedy podcast