Peter Friedman
Visiting Professor, University of Detroit Mercy Law School
Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity
How good a literary critic was the judge in the Catcher in the Rye case?
Will the judge’s decision that 60 Years Later: Coming Through the Rye infringes J.D. Salinger’s copyright in Catcher in the Rye stand up on appeal? My judgment is necessarily a qualified one. I haven’t read Coming through the Rye, and a truly informed judgment would require me to do so — in essence, the decision turns on whether Coming through the Rye is a commentary and criticism of Catcher in the Rye or, instead, an effort to cash in on the copyrighted character of Holden Caulfield. In other words, is Coming through the Rye original or not? I can’t tell for sure without reading it myself. Nevertheless, there are problems in the judge’s decision that cast it, in my mind, in some doubt.
Most troubling is the judge’s conclusion that Coming through the Rye cannot be deemed to comment on the original because Holden in the former is identical to Holden in the latter. The judge stated: “First, Colting’s assertion that his purpose in writing was to ‘critically examin[e] the character Holden, and his presentation in Catcher [in the Rye] as an authentic and admirable (maybe even heroic figure” is problematic and lacking in credibility.” To support that point, the judge refers to the sworn declaration submitted by Martha Woodmansee on behalf of Colting, quoting Woodmansee’s statement that “[r]eaders familiar with [Cather in the Rye] will anticipate the same laconic observations and reflections they associate with Holden Caulfield. What do they get from the 76 year old C? They get much the same kinds of observations and freflections, but coming from a 76 year old and applied to a world much changed in the 60 intervening years, such observations and reflections fall flat. They reveal a character whose development was arrested at 16, who instead of growin g up could only grow old.” The judge also quotes Woodmansee’s statement that the observations and reflections of Mr. C evoke “[in style and content . . . vintage Holden Caulfield, and coming from a 16 year old, they seemed honest and endearing. Coming from the 76 year old C, however, they seem pathetic.”
In short, the judge concluded that Coming through the Rye was not a parody of Catcher in the Rye because Holden in the new work was merely a copy, not an original character. She stated that it is hardly a parody to merely put the same character in a new situation: “It is hardly parodic to repeat that same exercise in contrast, just because society and the characters have aged.”
That is odd reasoning. One of the principal criticisms of Catcher in the Rye since its publication is that Holden did not develop at all emotionally or intellectually through the course of the book's story. "John Aldrige wrote that in the end, Holden remains what he was in the beginning -- cynical, defiant, and blind. As for the reader, there is identification but no insight, a sense of"pathos but not tragedy." This may be Salinger's intent, as Holden's world does not possess sufficient humanity to make the search for humanity dramatically feasible." In other words, by depicting a 76 year old Holden who is no different than Salinger's 16 year old Holden, one might conclude that the author was parodying the self-absorbed, dense, and unreflective 16 year old (as well as the author, who has contributed nothing to the creative life of the society from which he has done everything to withdraw since 1964). And indeed, Woodmansee takes the same characterization of the "young" and the "old" Holden the judge seizes upon and sees it precisely as parody. Her testimony is that "Mr. C" in Coming through the Rye is "a character whose development was arrested at 16, who instead of growing up only grows old. This is a devastating critique of Holden Caulfield in particular, of [Catcher in the Rye] generally, and of its author J.D. Salinger, whose apparent inability to ‘develop’ his hero reveals him to be ‘burned out.’” (emphasis added)
Is Coming through the Rye fair use.? I think on appeal it might well be found to be . It’s interesting that we make our judges literary critics in these cases. Why do I doubt the judge’s crtiticism? Because it seems to simplistic and because, knowing Martha Woodmansee personally, I feel far more confident in her abilities as a literary critic than I do in the judge’s.