Table of Contents
- 1 Who did the SOCS beat up Ponyboy?
- 2 What do the SOCS threaten to do to Ponyboy?
- 3 Did the SOCS jump Ponyboy?
- 4 How does Ponyboy’s view of the SOCS change?
- 5 Why do the SOCS who try to intimidate Ponyboy run off *?
- 6 Was Johnny justified in killing the SOC Why or why not?
- 7 How does ponyboy’s opinion of the SOCS change from the beginning of the novel to the end of the novel?
- 8 What did ponyboy learn about the SOCS?
- 9 Who are the SoCs and the greasers in Ponyboy?
- 10 Why is Ponyboy the most handsome of the group?
Who did the SOCS beat up Ponyboy?
Johnny Cade
Ponyboy feels great affection for his sixteen-year-old brother, Sodapop, whose charm and cheerfulness he admires. Ponyboy returns to the story of his solitary walk after the movies. As he walks, he notices a red Corvair trailing him. He quickens his pace as he remembers how badly the Socs beat his friend Johnny Cade.
What do the SOCS threaten to do to Ponyboy?
Ponyboy doesn’t feel scared when the Socs approach him and he threatens him with a broken bottle because he started to turn into the rest of the people in the gang, a real greaser who likes to pick fights when Ponyboy was never like that and hated fights and never found a reason for them.
Why did SOCS respond to Ponyboy and Johnny with so much aggression?
Johnny confesses that the Socs were going to drown Ponyboy and that he had to act before it was too late. So, Johnny reacts violently to the Socs because the gang regularly targets Greasers, especially if they are alone.
Did the SOCS jump Ponyboy?
Ponyboy is walking home alone when five Socs jump him. The Socs pull up in a Corvair. After they exit the car, they threaten to cut off Ponyboy’s long hair. When Ponyboy tries to back off, the Socs grab him and pin him down.
How does Ponyboy’s view of the SOCS change?
Over the course of the novel, Ponyboy’s opinion of the Socs shifts. As his understanding of them changes, Ponyboy sees the Socs either in a negative light or more sympathetically. After he meets Cherry at the movie theater, however, Ponyboy begins to realize that Socs are human just like greasers.
How does Ponyboy learn more about the SOCS?
Ponyboy learned from Randy that it’s “rough all over” and that socs have feelings too. Before talking to Randy, Ponyboy had this idealized view of socs, that maybe they didn’t bleed like the greasers did. After talking to Randy, he came to realize just how similar the two boys really were, regardless of clique.
Why do the SOCS who try to intimidate Ponyboy run off *?
Why do the Socs who try to intimidate Ponyboy run off? Ponyboy is convicted of leaving the scene of a crime and must write a paper.
Was Johnny justified in killing the SOC Why or why not?
First of all, Johnny was justified in killing Bob. It was in self-defense, the Socs beat up Johnny before traumatizing him, and the only reason why Johnny had his switchblade was because of the same Socs who tried to kill Ponyboy. Because they drove Johnny and Ponyboy away, by forcing Johnny to kill Bob.
Which Greaser was jumped and badly beaten up by the SOCS?
Ponyboy tells Cherry what happened to Johnny in chapter 2. It’s a horrific and sobering flashback within a book that is already brutally honest about violence. Johnny was jumped by a group of Socs and beaten so badly that the Greasers thought that Johnny was dead.
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 did ponyboy learn about the SOCS?
Why was Ponyboy attacked by the SoCs in the beginning of the movie?
Ponyboy is attacked because he is walking home from the movies alone. Ponyboy is attacked when walking home from the movies by the Socs because he is a greaser, and the two gangs are engaged in an ongoing retaliatory turfwar.
Who are the SoCs and the greasers in Ponyboy?
Compare the two groups. The two groups of teenagers Ponyboy describes are the Socs and the Greasers. The Socs, or the Socials, are middle class. They have more money than the Greasers. They are the West Side rich kids. They ride Mustangs and Corvairs. The Greasers live on the East Side. They don’t have nice cars.
Why is Ponyboy the most handsome of the group?
Ponyboy says he is the most handsome of the group. They are like me because they like to tease each other while supporting each other. They are different than me because they can still find joy in being in a very low social group and in a tough financial situation without trying to make it better.
Why are the SoCs attacking the greasers?
It often seems as if Socs are attacking greasers, and vice versa, because of an endless cycle of violence and revenge. One group attacks the other because of an attack that happened before. What might have started because someone was bored just perpetuates, and no one can stop it.