Table of Contents
- 1 What does Ponyboy say about the SOCS in Chapter 1?
- 2 What is Ponyboy’s perspective of how life is different for the greasers and the SOCS?
- 3 Why did pony think it was better to see SOCS as just guys?
- 4 How does ponyboy’s view of the SOCS change after his conversation with Randy?
- 5 Why does Ponyboy dislike the SoCs in the Outsiders?
- 6 What does Ponyboy say about the SoCs in Grease?
What does Ponyboy say about the SOCS in Chapter 1?
Ponyboy says that greasers are poorer and wilder than the Socs, whom the newspapers condemn one day for throwing parties and praise the next day for good citizenship. Greasers wear their hair long and put grease in it. They dress tough, steal, and get into gang fights.
What is Ponyboy’s perspective of how life is different for the greasers and the SOCS?
As the novel progresses, Ponyboy begins to interact with Socs such as Cherry Valance and Randy Adderson who give him an increased perspective on life. Ponyboy realizes that Socs also have issues and are individuals with their own unique sets of problems, which is something that most of the Greasers do not consider.
What does pony notice about one of the SOCS?
Two Socs get out, and Ponyboy notices that one of them is wearing three heavy rings. Ponyboy puts the blue Mustang together with the rings and realizes that this is the group that had attacked Johnny.
Why do SOCS hate greasers?
The Socs hate the Greasers because of the way they dress, the way they look, and the way they are, so they just walk up to them and beat them. And even though Greasers are stereotyped as if they were bad persons and rough, some of them enjoy beauty as well as others.
Why did pony think it was better to see SOCS as just guys?
Ponyboy thinks it is better to see the Socs as “just guys” because it brings them down to a level that he can better understand and, in turn, fear less. Ponyboy means that Socs are ordinary teenagers with many similarities to his Greaser friends. Socs have fears, just as Greasers do.
How does ponyboy’s view of the SOCS change after his conversation with Randy?
Ponyboy relates to Randy and gains more perspective on what it is like to be a Soc. After talking to Randy, Ponyboy feels better than he did. Ponyboy is relieved to find that he understands the Socs more than he did previously; he realizes that they have more in common than he had thought.
How does Ponyboy’s opinion of the SOCS change from the beginning of the novel to the end of the novel?
In The Outsiders, Ponyboy’s opinion of the Socs changes by the end of the story because he begins to see that they do not have the perfect lives he’s always imagined. By talking to Cherry and Randy, Pony gains a new understanding and realizes that “things are rough all over,” just as Cherry had told him.
What do the Socs do to Ponyboy how does Johnny react?
Bob tells Ponyboy that greasers are white trash with long hair, and Ponyboy retorts that Socs are nothing but white trash with Mustangs and madras shirts. In a rage, Ponyboy spits at the Socs. A Soc grabs Ponyboy and holds his head under the frigid water of the fountain. Ponyboy feels himself drowning and blacks out.
Why does Ponyboy dislike the SoCs in the Outsiders?
Ponyboy had an evolving conception of the Socs. At the beginning, he disliked the Socs because they are rich and have no problems, but he changes his opinion because of some discussions he had with a few of the Socs. His final opinion is that the Socs are just people after all, and they have problems too.
What does Ponyboy say about the SoCs in Grease?
At the beginning of the novel, Ponyboy, like all of the greasers, hates and fears the Socs. He thinks of them as dangerous enemies. Additionally, is ponyboy a greaser or a SOC? Ponyboy Curtis, a teenaged member of a loose gang of “greasers”, is leaving a movie theater when he is jumped by “Socs”, the greasers’ rival gang.
Who was Ponyboy talking to before the Rumble?
Before the big rumble where the greasers are supposed to avenge Johnny ’s death, and the Socs are avenging Bob’s, Pony has a conversation with a Soc named Randy. Randy is impressed that Johnny and Pony rescued the children from the fire, and tells Pony that he is tired of the fighting.
Why do the greasers hate the SoCs in the Outsiders?
At the beginning of the story, Ponyboy holds the same opinion of the socs as the rest of the greasers do. The greasers hate the socs because the socs are rich, always pick on the greasers, and think that they are better than the greasers. As the story continues, however, Ponyboy begins to realize that the socs are just people like the greasers are.