

Nevertheless, Muriel seems to be calm and does not believe in the seriousness of the issue. Even more, Muriel’s mother is even afraid of Seymour and wants her daughter to come back home from the vacation.

The woman believes that he is dangerous to society. In fact, during Muriel’s conversation with her mother, the readers may see that the mom clearly considers Seymour to be out of his mind. Even the closest people are not able to understand Seymour. As a result, he acts not like everyone else around him. It contributed to his uncontrolled childish behavior, a kind of immaturity, and the innocence. As it was already mentioned, the war has changed hero’s personality. Seymour’s place in societyĪnother reason that greatly influences the hero’s mind is the false beliefs of the materialistic society in which the hero lives. Nevertheless, he still remains in spirit as the essence of truth and innocence. In other ways, his behavior is the outcome of the Post Traumatic Stress Disorder the hero faces after the stressful situation he experienced during the war times. There are no doubts that, first of all, Seymour’s id is greatly affected by the events he faced during the war. The influence of the War II on hero’s psyche As a result, the hero is not able to see the differences between socially-acceptable things and socially-unacceptable, and, therefore, his psyche is affected the most. There are many moments throughout the story when it Seymour acts in a different way, especially in comparison to people around him. In the story, the hero cannot take control over his mind and, finally, it leads to his downfall. The readers may also analyze the peculiarities of the connection between Seymour and the rest of the world. In brief, it is a story about a mentally unstable man that is fighting with his id, superego. Salinger, introduces the character Seymour Glass, a man who served for a while in the armed forces during the second war. “A Perfect Day for Bananafish,” a story was written by J. 4 Applying Freudian Psychoanalysis Theory.2 The influence of the War II on hero’s psyche.On September 2, 1945, Japan's formal surrender to the United States ended World War II. "A Perfect Day for Bananafish," published in 1948, is an early example of a postmodernist story in which the key element of the plot (the motive for Seymour's suicide) is conspicuously missing-it challenges the very idea that a writer can enter the mind of a character and make the workings of such a mind understood by a reader. Postmodernists characteristically believe, for example, that what we see and hear is nothing but an artificial structure that does not represent the world accurately.

Loosely defined, postmodernism is an artistic movement that experiments with (and often destroys) traditional modes and methods of characterization and narrative. The Birth of American Postmodernism Literary movements rarely begin on clear and set dates the postmodernist movement was no exception.
