Definition of Mood
The mood of S.E. Hinton's The Outsiders is primarily tense and fearful. Because of the violent rift between the Socs and the greasers, the characters are full of hatred towards each other. The novel's plot is primarily driven by the night that a group of Socs in a blue Mustang jump Ponyboy and Johnny. The attack is unprovoked, driven by blind hatred and classism. Even before this attack, characters like Johnny are terrified because of the Socs, so much that they carry around weapons for self-defense. In Chapter 2, Ponyboy tells Cherry Valance why Johnny now carries a six-inch switchblade at all times:
He would kill the next person who jumped him. Nobody was ever going to beat him like that again. Not over his dead body . . .
The mood of S.E. Hinton's The Outsiders is primarily tense and fearful. Because of the violent rift between the Socs and the greasers, the characters are full of hatred towards each other. The novel's plot is primarily driven by the night that a group of Socs in a blue Mustang jump Ponyboy and Johnny. The attack is unprovoked, driven by blind hatred and classism. Even before this attack, characters like Johnny are terrified because of the Socs, so much that they carry around weapons for self-defense. In Chapter 2, Ponyboy tells Cherry Valance why Johnny now carries a six-inch switchblade at all times:
Unlock with LitCharts A+He would kill the next person who jumped him. Nobody was ever going to beat him like that again. Not over his dead body . . .