"Slaughterhouse five the importance of setting" Essays and Research Papers

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    There are a lot of things that happened in the book Slaughterhouse Five and in Billy’s lifetime that Billy and the author explain in this book but the author explains the story in a very difficult way. It is hard to follow what happens in the book because of how Billy acts and thinks. He changes location constantly because of his flashbacks from war. In the first chapter it is hard to pick up what is happening because the narrator is speaking and is talking about Billy but when you reach the second

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    Slaughterhouse-Five 1993. "The true test of comedy is that it shall awaken thoughtful laughter." Choose a novel‚ play‚ or long poem in which a scene or character awakens "thoughtful laughter" in the reader. Write an essay in which you show why this laughter is "thoughtful" and how it contributes to the meaning of the work. English author George Meredith wrote‚ “The true test of comedy is that it shall awaken thoughtful laughter.” Slaughterhouse-Five would have been quite the comedy in Meredith’s

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    George Gerges Ms. Worth AP Language and Comp 30 November 2012 The Combat of Death In Slaughterhouse Five‚ Kurt Vonnegut uses irony to demonstrate the destructiveness and depreciations of war. Vonnegut incorporated many cases of irony in his book‚ and they overall enhance the meaning throughout the passage. One of the prime situations of irony took place with Edgar Derby. This poor man had to endure suffering and pain during the course of the war and the firebombing‚ only to be executed in the

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    The Importance of Setting

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    Charlotte Bronte. Bronte uses different setting in order to show what the characters are feeling. The setting is often a reflection of human emotion. The setting also foreshadows certain events that are going to occur. A use of setting to portray a character’s emotion is essential to a novel. It gives the reader more of a feel for what is going on. For example‚ when Rochester proposes to Jane. Jane is dazzled and excited about the idea. The setting echoes her excitement‚ "A waft of wind

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    In Slaughterhouse Five‚ Kurt Vonnegut explains his experience of the World War II bombing of Dresden‚ Germany. Vonnegut’s creative antiwar novel shows the audience the hardships of the life of a soldier through his writing technique. Slaughterhouse Five is written circularly‚ and time travel is ironically the only consistency throughout the book. Vonnegut outlines the life of Billy Pilgrim‚ whose life and experiences are uncannily similar to those of Vonnegut. In Chapter 1‚ Kurt Vonnegut non-fictionally

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    Slaughterhouse-Five is a novel written by Kurt Vonnegut. This book could be interpreted in many ways but in tn the most direct explanation‚ the book is about a man who served in the army during World War II who decides to write about a man who serves in World War II who is also dealing with aliens‚ time travel‚ family‚ and such. The “escape” for the first man mentioned in the novel‚ is literature. For many years literature has been accepted and praised throughout the world. Since the beginning literature

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    The Humor of Slaughterhouse-Five Slaughterhouse-Five has a dark sense of humor that accentuates Vonnegut’s nihilistic view of the human condition. The humor in Slaughterhouse-Five is uniquely dark‚ twisted‚ and overly ironic. So it goes. Throughout the novel‚ Vonnegut would go out of his way to humorously show that the human condition has hit rock bottom. For example‚ take the character Howard W Campbell‚ Jr.‚ an American who betrayed his country for Nazi Germany. In the story‚ Campbell visits

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    a senior in Upper Darby High school and recently heard that the school administration has decided to ban “Slaughterhouse-five” which is a great book in my opinion. It is a book about WWII soldier’s journey and how the prisoner of wars passed their days until end. It was even ranked 18th greatest English novel of the 20th century by Modern Library (“Banned Books Awareness: Slaughterhouse-five”). The author of the book Kurt Vonnegut was an American soldier in WWII and had faced the fire bomb of Dresden

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    Kurt Vonnegut finds a way to show us how certain things effect us as human beings. Throughout Cats Cradle and Slaughterhouse Five we come to see his attempt to send us the message about our societies upbringings. Putting a magnifying glass on specific issues such as religion‚ science and war and how they took a tool on society as a whole. Without analyzing both books one can come to conclude several differences but when trying to get the bigger pictures you can see how they are actual quite alike

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    Kurt Vonnegut places his own life experiences In Slaughterhouse Five and Cat’s Cradle‚ in order to make the novels‚ which are frequently deemed ludicrous‚ more realistic and to answer problematic queries that have risen up in his past. In Slaughterhouse Five‚ Vonnegut‘s experience in World War II‚ a prisoner of war forced to witness the Allied forces’ firebombing of Dresden‚ is the essence of the novel‚ while Vonnegut’s great distaste for war and his mother’s suicide are greatly personified in Cat’s

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