"Slaughterhouse five by kurt vonnegut" Essays and Research Papers

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    Slaughterhouse Five tells the story of Billy Pilgrim who has become “unstuck in time.” Young Billy is born and raised in Ilium‚ New York‚ he is "tall and weak‚ and shaped like a bottle of Coca-Cola‚" and studying to be an optometrist. He is drafted into the U.S. military and despite his scrawny‚ weak build‚ he is sent to Europe to fight. While fighting in Germany‚ Billy is all of a sudden sent to 1968‚ where the plane he was on has crashed into the mountains of Vermont. He becomes aware that we possesses

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    Kurt’s Perception Kurt Vonnegut is a very unique writer and uses his writing skills to give a perspective never seen before. The way he uses his vision through the war tells a complementary story of his actions and how the battle went. Focused as in twine the story gives an outlook of the war in a gruesome way and and unexpected lapses. Kurt criticized the battle in various ways to give us a deception on what happen in ironic examples throughout the passage. True or not‚ slaughterhouse is an inside look

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    ENG 255L-114 29 April 2011 Slaughterhouse Five Final Reflection Since reading Slaughterhouse Five‚ the reoccurring theme has been the idea of war. I believe that this theme has lead to show us how critical and really how destructive war can be. Although in some aspects Billy Pilgrim is able to recover from war‚ I still feel that it disheartened him a lot. I believe the stress and post trauma really seems to take a toll on him. I get this idea based on events and experiences that he had

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    Mother Night What intrigued me the most when reading Mother Night‚ by Kurt Vonnegut‚ were the quotes. He says things in a way that really make you step back and think. You could almost tell this book’s story by discussing some of the quotes. In Mother Night‚ apolitical expatriate American playwright Howard W. Campbell‚ Jr. refashions himself as a Nazi propagandist in order to pass coded messages on to the U.S. generals and preserve his marriage to a German woman—their "nation of

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    The Catastrophe of War in Slaughterhouse-Five Russian Prime Minister Joseph Stalin once said‚ "A single death is a tragedy‚ a million deaths is a statistic." The impersonalization of war and death that he shares is an realistic characterization of war; originally intending to improve the lives of people‚ yet inevitably leading to the destruction of human life. Author Kurt Vonnegut endorses this view in his novel Slaughterhouse-Five; he shows that war can never be justified as long as innocent life

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    Many of these examples tend to reflect feelings against war. Kurt Vonnegut is no different and his experience with war inspired him to write a series of novels starting with Slaughter-House Five. It is a unique novel expressing Vonnegut ’s feelings about war. These strong feeling can be seen in the similarities between characters‚ information about the Tralfamadorians‚ dark humor‚ and the structure of the novel. Kurt Vonnegut is an American novelist from Indianapolis‚ Indiana‚ born in 1922

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    different ways to keep the story at a smooth pace. Kurt Vonnegut‚ the author of Slaughterhouse-Five‚ uses time as a way to give the reader an idea of what his main character’s life was like and what he had gone through throughout his life. Vonnegut’s manipulation of time may make the story confusing to some at times‚ but he effectively explains his character’s background through this different use of time. Throughout the plot of Slaughterhouse-Five‚ the idea of time is thrown around in several ways

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    Kurt Vonnegut breaks the conventional rules of storytelling in his novel‚ Slaughterhouse-Five. Vonnegut does so because he was not able to write a standard novel on the bombing of Dresden‚ which he tried to do many times. Additionally‚ Vonnegut wants his novel to be an anti-war novel‚ he wants it to explain the bombing of Dresden and the atrocious things both sides did. His purpose for writing this novel was to have Billy Pilgrim‚ the main character‚ accept the bombing because Vonnegut learns to

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    of time travel‚ aliens‚ and porn stars‚ Kurt Vonnegut delivers an iron hard moral statement on the aftermath of war in his novel‚ Slaughterhouse-Five. We follow the fictional character‚ Billy Pilgrim‚ as he struggles‚ like Vonnegut did‚ to discover the purpose of life. Kurt Vonnegut uses Slaughterhouse-Five as a way to cope with his experience in the Dresden massacre. By taking the narrator’s voice‚ and by employing the themes of time and fate‚ Kurt Vonnegut seeks to reach out to the world‚ exposing

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    What is it good for? Absolutely nothin’!” and if Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five had a theme song‚ this would be the perfect song. Slaughterhouse Five is one of the greatest anti-war books of all time- it even says so on the back cover. In order to convey his anti-war attitude to the readers‚ Vonnegut uses many different rhetorical devices in Slaughterhouse Five‚ including analogy‚ irony‚ and satire. The first important rhetorical device Vonnegut uses to convey his anti war attitude is analogy

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