slaughterhouse 5
Kurt Vonnegut attempted to write an anti-war novel after his old war buddy, Bernard O' Hare's wife, Mary, clearly expressed how disgusted she was with war novels because they glorified something that she thought of as repulsive. Vonnegut undoubtedly has written Slaughterhouse Five as an anti-war novel. He uses the book's plot structure, time, and irony to convey a message of antipathy towards war in general and especially to World War Two, in which he fought. Slaughterhouse Five arbitrarily switches from childhood to adulthood. This shows how Billy Pilgrim was incapable of living his life like a normal person. His time in war has scarred him psychologically for the rest of his life. The reader gets tired of being unable to comprehend what is going on, and is forced to imagine what is happening to Billy. Most novels start with childhood and logically proceed to old age, with a few flashbacks. But, in this novel, the protagonist adopts the outlook on life, which aliens who supposedly kidnapped him have. This is the only way he can figure out the unfastened
Every time two people get divorced, two more people are stating their vows to each other. Vonnegut offered a solution to this in the book, but Billy seemed to not want to follow it, he ignored it. It is a brilliant piece of literature, which doesn't quite make any sense until it is finished and thought about. The paradoxical events that take place in Slaughterhouse Five are cleverly disguised. "God grant me the serenity to accept things I can not change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom always to tell the difference. But, when the time is taken to examine the deaths of most of the characters in the novel and some of the more ridiculous events, one notices a pattern of absurdity. Time was the most important device used in this work. One of them was when Edgar Derby was executed. Afterwards, Valencia, Billy's wife, is on her way to the hospital to see Billy when she gets in a major car accident. Vonnegut tries to explain that life is an endless cycle of beginning and endings. There are many ironic incidents in this book. Mary O' Hare should have been happy when she read this novel.
Common topics in this essay:
Billy Pilgrim,
Slaughterhouse Five,
Valencia Billy's,
Roland Weary,
O' Hare's,
O' Hare,
World War,
Edgar Derby,
Kurt Vonnegut,
anti-war novel,
slaughterhouse five,
world war,
five anti-war,
five anti-war novel,
billy pilgrim,
structure plot,
slaughterhouse five anti-war,
|