kept in Dresden with other POWs to work in a syrup factory. When Dresden was bombed on February 13‚ 1945‚ he survived while hiding in a cellar of a slaughterhouse where the POWs were living. Vonnegut was finally able to come home in May of 1945. He discusses his struggle to write about his experiences of at the beginning of his novel Slaughterhouse-Five and was unable to publish the book until 1969. Vonnegut created Billy Pilgrim‚ the protagonist of the story‚ in order to express his own views
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Starr’s famous anti-war song goes‚ “War! What is it good for? Absolutely nothin’!” and if Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five had a theme song‚ this would be the perfect song. Slaughterhouse Five is one of the greatest anti-war books of all time- it even says so on the back cover. In order to convey his anti-war attitude to the readers‚ Vonnegut uses many different rhetorical devices in Slaughterhouse Five‚ including analogy‚ irony‚ and satire. The first important rhetorical device Vonnegut uses to
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Plungers Inside a fantasy world of time travel‚ aliens‚ and porn stars‚ Kurt Vonnegut delivers an iron hard moral statement on the aftermath of war in his novel‚ Slaughterhouse-Five. We follow the fictional character‚ Billy Pilgrim‚ as he struggles‚ like Vonnegut did‚ to discover the purpose of life. Kurt Vonnegut uses Slaughterhouse-Five as a way to cope with his experience in the Dresden massacre. By taking the narrator’s voice‚ and by employing the themes of time and fate‚ Kurt Vonnegut seeks
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to keep the story at a smooth pace. Kurt Vonnegut‚ the author of Slaughterhouse-Five‚ uses time as a way to give the reader an idea of what his main character’s life was like and what he had gone through throughout his life. Vonnegut’s manipulation of time may make the story confusing to some at times‚ but he effectively explains his character’s background through this different use of time. Throughout the plot of Slaughterhouse-Five‚ the idea of time is thrown around in several ways. In the
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Ryan Bown September 4‚ 2009 Biff G Slaughterhouse-Five In the novel Slaughterhouse-Five‚ Billy Pilgrim discovers that the Tralfamadorian idea of time is that every moment is sealed by destiny and structured in a way that is unchangeable. Even though the Tralfamadorians and Billy can see their future‚ they know it is impossible to change it. Also‚ since their philosophy of time is fixed by fate and cannot be altered‚ it negates the concept of free will derived from Earth. In the beginning
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Commentary of How Irony is used in the Book In the book Slaughterhouse 5‚ the author‚ Kurt Vonnegut‚ gives a brief account of his life that spans throughout World War II and his post-war traumatic war experience. The whole book plays throughout time as he travels in his thoughts around the places he has been to‚ implying that there is no present‚ future or past but just time‚ accompanied by a steady and regular pulse-like pace throughout the book. There is also a thin layer of mood spread out
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The Trophy for Villainy Although many might heartily defend the villainy of Roland Weary or Paul Lazarro‚ it is clear that the true antagonists of Vonnegut’s novel Slaughterhouse-five are culture‚ society and history‚ all of which play a major role in Billy Pilgrim’s ascent to death. Characters are not villains; their actions may suggest the contrary‚ but they are caused by the negative effects of society‚ which changes with area‚ culture‚ which changes with time‚ and history‚ which cannot be changed
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commonplace of historical villains will be re-examined and re-evaluated alongside the most notable of traditional historical heroes. For both post-modern novels‚ Timothy Findley’s The Wars‚ set in World War 1‚ and its predecessor Kurt Vonnegut’s the Slaughterhouse 5‚ set in World War 2‚ this is more than evident. As in both novels‚ the protagonists witness those who would normally be considered enemies in wars‚ made their aides and those normally considered allies‚ made an obstacle. Whether it’s the fellow
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emotionally numb‚ especially with people they were once close to. They may experience sleep problems‚ feel detached or numb‚ or be easily startled.” Billy Pilgrim epitomizes a victim of this mental disorder. Throughout his life‚ beginning with his near death experienced when his father used “the method of sink-or-swim”(43) and tossed Billy into the deep end of the pool‚ Billy has experienced many traumatic events that could have triggered the effects of PTSD. The first sign of his symptoms became evident
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Slaughterhouse Five The concept of a linear beginning‚ middle‚ and end in the progression of time is thrown askew in Kurt Vonnegut’s SlaughterhouseFive through Billy’s travels through time and space. All people on earth experience a chronological progression of time; they experience birth and death‚ and are able to perceive the consequences of their actions. Because of Billy’s time travel‚ death does not represent the ultimate end to one’s life. Therefore‚ to Billy death does not retain the importance that it does to others
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