"Targets of satire in breakfast of champions" Essays and Research Papers

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    Breakfast of Champions

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    "Breakfast of Champions" In Kurt Vonnegut’s Breakfast of Champions‚ the narrator believes Americans are doing the best to live "like the characters in story books" (pg. 49). He believes that the problems our planet faces are a direct result of our individual desires to attain our story book perfect lives. Through this "colorful" and outrageous story of two white men‚ Kilgore Trout and Dwayne Hoover‚ Vonnegut twists in some of his concerns and criticisms of the typical American life with humor and

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    Breakfast of Champions

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    Breakfast of Champions Have you ever read a book and enjoyed it‚ but once you were finished you wondered what it was really about? You wondered if the book had a deep meaning that you had to sit and think about or if the book was just for entertainment purposes only and had no meaning whatsoever. For me‚ Breakfast of Champions by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. was this type of book. Breakfast of Champions is a story about two men who are going to eventually meet each other at a festival for the arts

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    Breakfast of Champions

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    Tyler Hatesohl Professor Giles English 209 April 11‚ 2011 Breakfast of Champions Assignment Although the overall message that American’s are “machines” is clearly stated to the reader‚ Kurt Vonnegut also includes many hidden themes throughout the text. These include race‚ class‚ gender‚ overpopulation as well as others. The narrator makes it clear to distinguish each new characters race in the novel. Throughout the text‚ it becomes clear that Vonnegut makes a clear distinction between

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    Targets of Satire

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    The most abundance evidence for Haliburton’s targets in "The Clockmaker" is Americans. "The Clockmaker" was written when Nova Scotia had "No capital or markets and with a population which had acquired habits that were not suited for a life of meagre income and sober farming" (Klinck‚ 92-101). Haliburton blamed the Americans for this. One of the reasons he wrote "The Clockmaker" was to enlighten Nova Scotia and the rest of the world about the true heritage and resources of the colony. "The salvation

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    Matthew Choma English 101 Prof. J. Douglas 4/9/11 Breakfast of Champions: Science Fiction as Social Commentary Vonnegut’s symbolic and satirical representation of humans as robots in his novel: Breakfast of Champions is representative of the authors interpretation of world events and conflicting nature of human beings. The renowned author often hits on significant and worrisome themes such as destruction of the planet and overpopulation. His unique and unparallel style includes outrageous

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    AP English Language and Composition 19 November 2012 Breakfast of Champions: Repercussions of Having a Unique Sexuality The symbol planet Mercury‚ used by the transgendered community‚ symbolizes a crescent and cross‚ the male and female principles of harmony in an individual. Human sexuality refers to the sexual attraction between two people‚ which is determined by their sexual orientation. Whether someone’s attraction remains towards the opposite sex (heterosexuality)‚ to the same sex (homosexuality)

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    In Breakfast of Champions‚ Kurt Vonnegut uses a very real‚ direct‚ and sometimes playful style. In the preface‚ he speaks directly to the reader‚ fully exposing his personality‚ his reasons for writing the novel‚ as well as how he intends to write the novel. In doing this‚ Vonnegut sets up the novel perfectly by basically telling the reader what they are to expect. Rather than spend multiple chapters establishing the tone‚ the various themes‚ and the other elements of the novel‚ he covers them all

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    all is by no means just. It is clear that for certain people‚ life is easier than for others. These people are the able-bodied white men whose quality of life greatly outshines the lives of people of color and those with mental illnesses. In Breakfast of Champions‚ Kurt Vonnegut identifies the irony in America’s unjust treatment of its citizens while emphasizing the neglect of those with mental illness in a consumeristic

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    Freedom can be described as free-will or the option to do whatever the self wants without an impediment. In Breakfast of Champions by Kurt Vonnegut‚ Vonnegut illustrates the question of controversy through the two characters‚ Kilgore Trout‚ and Dwayne Hoover. Vonnegut makes the reader question whether or not they have free-will by making Dwayne Hoover challenge his own possession or dispossession of freedom. Through the example of Dwayne Hoover and his belief that he is the sole person on Earth whom

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    When I was in upper elementary school‚ I read Kurt Vonnegut novels. My favorite was Breakfast of Champions. In it‚ a failure of a science-fiction author named Kilgore Trout with only three fans in the known universe was said to have written a story: Now It Can Be Told. In it‚ not a single person but one human had free will; everyone else was an unthinking machine. Now‚ I sit on the bus‚ next to an obnoxious seventh-grader who wouldn’t stop talking about his friend from an old school who does rather

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