Discussion Topic

Jody's Maturation in The Red Pony

Summary:

In John Steinbeck's The Red Pony, Jody Tiflin experiences significant maturation through various events. Initially, Jody's responsibility for his red pony marks a step toward adulthood, as he must care for it and gains newfound respect from his peers. Another pivotal moment occurs when Gitano, an old man, arrives at the ranch, prompting Jody to confront the realities of aging and mortality. These experiences, alongside the loss of his pony, deepen Jody's understanding of life's complexities and hardships.

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In The Red Pony, what incident caused Jody to mature?

The Red Pony by John Steinbeck tells of a young boy's entrance into manhood. Throughout the novel, Jody faces numerous conflicts and disappointments that chip away at his youth.

One event which causes Jody to grow up is his ownership of a red pony. After getting the pony, Jody asks his father if he can take the pony to school to show his classmates. His father does not believe it to be a good idea, because the pony is not "halter broke yet." His father comes up with an alternative: bring his friends home with him after school. Jody grows up because of the pony in two ways.

First, Jody is completely responsible for the pony. He is warned that if he does not take care of the pony, his father "will sell him off in a minute." This tends to be the first step towards adult responsibility—taking care of...

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another living being.

Second, Jody's friends feel that Jody has grown up when they see his pony.

Before today, Jody had been a boy, dressed in overalls and a blue shirt—quieter than most, even suspected of being a little cowardly. And now he was different. They knew instinctively that a man on a horse is spiritually as well as physically bigger than a man on foot. They knew Jody had been miraculously lifted out of equality with them, and had been placed over them.

Here, Jody has become a man in the eyes of his peers. So while this was not necessarily an event which caused him to grow up per se, the responsibility of taking care of the pony led to his friends identifying him as a man. The "growing up" happened as he showed his newfound responsibility off to his friends.

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In The Red Pony by John Steinbeck Jody comes to a greater level of maturity when the old Man Gitano comes back to the ranch to die. Jody’s father is angry at the old man, perhaps because he senses something he is unwilling to admit. When Easter, the father’s horse, comes up missing, and the farmhands report seeing the old man on him, Jody’s father is angry, but Jody is seized by a great sadness as he sees in his mind Gitano and Easter--both who are perceived to have outlived their usefulness riding off into the wilderness to die. Jody realizes the sadness of this, but nobody else seems to.

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What evidence shows Jody's maturation from "The Gift" to "The Great Mountains" in The Red Pony?

In “The Gift” Jody is a ten year old, obedient and naïve boy.  He doesn’t question anything he is told.  He seems satisfied with his life.

His father was a disciplinarian. Jody obeyed him in everything without questions of any kind. (ch 1, p 3-4)

When Jody’s pony dies, he is saddened to the point of not caring anymore.  His father asks him if he knows that the buzzard did not kill the pony.

[Billy] lifted Jody in his arms, and had turned to carry him home. But he turned back on Carl Tiflin. "'Course he knows it," Billy said furiously, "Jesus Christ man, can't you see how he'd feel about it? (ch 1, p. 34)

As chapter 2 begins, Jody is “listlessly” looking for something to do.  He begins throwing rocks at Swallow’s nests and setting mousetraps for the dog to stick his nose in.  He does this not out of meanness, but out of boredom.  Jody has learned hard lessons about life, but he has also begun to accept life's difficulties.

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