Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five

789 Words4 Pages
Title: Slaughterhouse-Five Author: Kurt Vonnegut Main Characters (Protagonist/Antagonist), Title, & Traits: Billy Pilgrim: protagonist; WWII soldier and prisoner-of-war survivor, and optometrist after the war; weak, strange, passive Bernard O’Hare: former soldier and POW at Dresden who helps Vonnegut write his story about Dresden; helpful Mary O’Hare: wife of Bernard; convinces Vonnegut to tell how bad war really is; honest, realist Gerhard Müller: taxi driver who helps Vonnegut write his story; helpful, peaceful, kind Roland Weary: antagonist; soldier who saves Billy during the war; greedy, jarhead Paul Lazzaro: antagonist; soldier who avenges Roland; angry, crazy Bertram Copeland Rumfoord: antagonist; professor who glorifies war…show more content…
Following the introduction of Vonnegut, the reader is introduced to Billy Pilgrim, who is an optometrist student in New York, during which he gets drafted to fight in WWII. Towards the end of 1944, Billy is sent to Luxembourg to fight in the Battle of the Bulge, where he meets the antagonist, Roland Weary, who threatens to shoot Billy. While pointing the gun at Billy, German soldiers arrive and take both of them as prisoners-of-war. While in the prison camp, Billy meets Edgar Derby, a teacher, and another antagonist named Paul Lazzaro, who promises vengeance against Billy for letting Roland die. Shortly after, Billy and Edgar are sent to a camp in Dresden, where American bombers destroy a great majority of the camp. After the war, Billy returns to optometry…show more content…
"I have told my sons that they are not under any circumstances to take part in massacres, and that the news of massacres of enemies is not to fill them with satisfaction or glee” (Vonnegut 19). Symbols & Meaning: Bird: while trying to describe the Dresden firebombing, the bird says “poo-tee-weet,” which presents the idea that nothing can be said about the bombing because it was such a terrible incident; supports the fact that nothing positive can be said about any war, not just
Open Document