Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five

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Slaughterhouse-Five, by Kurt Vonnegut, is a classic American anti-war novel. The story takes place during World War II and is told non-linearly through the flashbacks of a chaplain’s assistant. This feckless, pathetic, funny-looking character is named Billy Pilgrim. Billy has no desire to live, yet people keep saving him anyway. He even survives the Dresden Fire Bombing, which serves as the climax of the book. Through experiencing everyone’s death but his own, Billy Pilgrim has a Tralfamadorian ideology in the fact that people do not really live or die, they only are temporarily existing in a state of one or the other. In chapter 3, a colonel that Billy is imprisoned with begins to die. This Colonel is nicknamed Wild Bob and he hallucinates…show more content…
The fact that Bob’s simple death was considered to be “heroic” says a lot about the characterization of the events in the book. Death is a general overarching theme of the naturally occurring universe and it is inevitable. Billy shows no fear or emotion when someone dies because it is merely a part of life. In the eyes of the Billy, it was simply Wild Bob’s time to go. In Wild Bob’s final moments, the narrator says, “The Germans carried the corpse out. The corpse was Wild Bob. So it goes.” The fact that Bob’s death is dealt with so matter-of-factly makes the reader feel as though his death was important than others, but still not important enough to strike up any unusual emotions. There is no funeral, there is no eulogy, there is no service. It is fate that he has passed and nothing more. The universal principle of fate says that the order of things is presumably prescribed. Wild Bob’s death is merely another stepping stone of the…show more content…
The passage reads, “He coughed and coughed. Every time he inhaled his lungs rattled like greasy paper bags.” Throughout this scene, it is not evident that this character is dying. The only proof that he is dying is because the narrator says so, and has apparently experienced this moment before through time travel. The simile used in the quotation gives the reader an intense sense of imagery for Bob’s suffering, and one can not even begin to feel the illness he is enduring. Without strength in his lungs, Wild Bob gives a rousing speech that continues into his last moments of existence. The fact that this character treats his lung situation as a normalcy says that these characters are used to suffering through illness with no hope of cure besides self-healing. Wild Bobs condition is an example of the widespread suffering and the passiveness it is treated with because of the commonness in
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