Research Paper on Kurt Vonnegut’s “Slaughterhouse Five” by Stephanie Gill Outline I. Introduction and Name a) “Slaughterhouse-Five‚ or The Children’s Crusade (1969)” b) Most famous work about the bombing of Dresden c) “Vonnegut’s telegraphic‚ schizophrenic” style II. Background a) Vonnegut joined the Army b) Vonnegut’s capture c) Vonnegut’s experiences in Dresden III. Plot Summary a) Idea of
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Daniel Mallory Accelerated English Steve Bachelor 12 October 2014 Twists & Tralfalmadorians: Symbolism in Slaughterhouse Five Not everyone is a time-traveling‚ dimension-defying war veteran. However‚ Billy Pilgrim‚ the main character in the novel Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut‚ is one such human. Blessed with a special gift of being able to walk through time and space unexpectedly by an alien race called Tralfalmadorians (from a planet by the name of Tralfalmador)‚ Billy Pilgrim encounters
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Topic 2: Slaughterhouse Five In Slaughterhouse Five‚ Vonnegut shows a lot of hopelessness in showing continuous death and war. He breaks the notion that there are “good guys” and “bad guys” in war by showing that all humans have a capacity for evil. In addition‚ he gives us the notion that people are capable of doing incredibly evil deeds. We can see this in Lazarro when he tells a story to Billy about a time when a dog bites him. Lazarro acting in revenge sticks razor blades into a steak and
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SLAUGHTERHOUSE-FIVE OR THE CHILDRENS CRUSADE Billy Pilgrim | Page 1 Billy is the main character which emphasis of the whole book is placed. The novel is about four sides of Billy’s life: First his past life as a soldier in World War II; Next his present‚ uneventful life as a husband‚ father‚ and optometrist in Ilium‚ New York; Then his time travels that
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“So it goes.” This quote is utilized more than 100 times by author Kurt Vonnegut in the anti-war novel: Slaughterhouse Five. Now you must be wondering‚ why does the book keep this phrase so redundant? There is a reason this quote practically repeats itself in the entire book; because it summarizes the obstacles and hardships that we encounter in our daily‚ human lives. This saying from Vonnegut neatly packs the sorrows‚ struggles‚ and suffering in our lives in three simple words. So Kurt Vonnegut
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Slaughterhouse Five‚ or The Children’s Crusade: A Dirty Dance With Death was written by Kurt Vonnegut and originally published in March of 1969. It’s a dark humor science fiction story that exactly fits Vonnegut’s writing style: funny‚ astounding and makes you question the human race as a whole. The book follows a the lifespan Billy Pilgrim of Ilium‚ New York. He grew up to be an optometrist‚served his country at war‚ got married‚ had children and aged to an old man. But his life was not ordinary
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Slaughterhouse-Five is a novel written in troubled times about troubled times. It is one of the most compelling anti-war novels in American history. Kurt Vonnegut‚ the writer of this novel‚ uses his own experiences to tell a story about World War II. He was a prisoner of war during the firebombing of Dresden. Dresden is a city in Germany that was firebombed unexpectedly in 1945 as a warning to the Russians. Between 35‚000 and 135‚000 people were killed in the bombing. Vonnegut believes war is bad
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In Slaughterhouse Five‚ Vonnegut uses satire in the topics of war‚ aliens‚ fate and the reasons for life itself. In Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut‚ the author uses many literary devices to bring across his point including black humor‚ irony‚ wit and sarcasm. He mainly uses satire throughout the book. Satire is a literary device found in works of literature that uses irony and humor to mock social convention‚ another work of art‚ or anything its author thinks ridiculous to make a point. Vonnegut
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In slaughterhouse five‚ there is a character named little Paul Lazzaro that Billy Pilgrim mentions quite often in the book. In the chapters‚ Lazzaro always talks about revenge and he says “revenge is sweet” and that nobody ever got it from Lazzaro who didn’t have it coming. Revenge in a violent sense is never justifiable no matter what anybody has done to hurt the other person. Lazzaro in the book tells a story about what happened to a dog that bit him. The story goes as Lazzaro was walking and the
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Science Fiction: the Vessel for Fatalism Throughout Slaughterhouse-Five‚ Kurt Vonnegut creates an environment shaped by elements of science fiction. These elements‚ notably time travel and alien contact‚ make the novel "a science fiction that deals with the topic of free will versus fatalism‚" (Isaacs 408). Throughout the novel Billy remains "unstuck in time‚" seeing his whole life flash before his eyes in a random order of events (Vonnegut 15). This random order forces the reader to examine the
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