defied categorizing‚ it became a category itself. Nevertheless‚ this movement has had a profound impact on countless literary‚ cinematographic‚ art‚ and philosophic works. Two works that have been profoundly influenced by postmodernism includes Slaughterhouse 5 by Kurt Vonnegut‚ and the film and book The Hours‚ by Michael Cunningham. While both works have been influenced by modernism in separate ways‚ they ultimately share its key themes: an abstraction of time‚ a rejection of reality‚ and a search
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Within “Slaughterhouse Five‚” innocence and paradise are used to juxtapose apathy and violence. The two types of emotions complement one another; they accentuate the places where the other lacks. Innocence and paradise implies a sense of naivety‚ as seen by the constant reference to children within the novel. While‚ apathy and violence implies ignorance‚ which is apparent every time Billy Pilgrim seeks answers about the nature of his world from the Tralfamadorians. Nonetheless‚ Vonnegut illustrates
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was not only witnessed‚ as a German prisoner of war‚ the fire-bombing of Dresden by the Allied forces on the night of 13 February 1945‚ but also survived the ensuing fire-storm that devoured the city in one of Dresden’s slaughterhouses‚ hence the title of his novel‚ Slaughterhouse-Five. Witnessing the massacre of 135‚000 innocent civilians left Vonnegut mentally traumatized and spiritually paralyzed. Understandably‚ the horror of the disaster haunted him for long even after the Second World War”. Vonnegut
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in at least two of Vonnegut ’s later novels‚ certain female characters exercise individuality in their own existences and effect positively the awareness and attitudes of male characters. From the beginning of Player Piano (1952) through Slaughterhouse Five (1969)‚ Kurt Vonnegut describes the characters of his various worlds in terms of their victimization at the hands of a dehumanizing‚ or perhaps a better term might be "deindividualizing‚" technologically fixated‚ industrial/militaristic society
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death of his sister Alice from cancer within hours of her husband’s death in a train crash‚ and many‚ many other events of the world today all affect this sensitive and contemplative individual in a way that is scarring. And yet‚ early in Slaughterhouse-Five he reflects on the one great lesson he learned from his graduate studies in anthropology‚ and that is that no one is bad‚ disgusting‚ or ridiculous (8). This view is reflected in his novels‚ as they all lack a villain‚ which has been
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all collectively guilty for numerous crimes against our fellow humans. All these tragic and valuable moral concerns came together as a masterpiece in the 1969 Novel Slaughterhouse-Five‚ which was written in only six weeks and was largely autobiographical‚ but also science fictional‚ Billy Pilgrim‚ the main character of Slaughterhouse was in a journey across significant moments of his life including a visit to the planet Tralfamadore and the bombing of Dresden. "World War II made war reputable because
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The short story called The Slaughterhouse was written by Esteban Echeverria. Esteban studied economics and business management in France‚ bringing in new ideologies to reshape Argentina. During the independence movement in Argentina‚ he wrote the Socialist Dogma. The Socialist Dogma presented the liberalist program for social reform. The Slaughterhouse was one of the unpublished documents Echeverria wrote to describe the regime of Rosas. In The Slaughterhouse‚ meat was scarce in Buenos Aires during
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Kurt Vonnegut was one of the most prominent writers of the early twentieth century. He based a majority of his writings on World War II‚ which he took part in. In his book “Slaughter House 5”‚ Vonnegut effectively uses his techniques of characterization‚ symbolism‚ and theme to establish the major themes of the novel. Vonnegut constantly uses characterization throughout his novel. Vonnegut described one of his characters Billy Pilgrim as “...like a rock” (Vonnegut 8). He says this to show how
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Vonnegut doesn’t only repeat words‚ scenes‚ images but he also repeats stories such as the assassination of Billy Pilgrim by a gunman hired by Paul Lazzaro or the execution of Earl Derby for taking a teapot from the ruins of Dresden after the bombing. He mentions them repeatedly throughout the narrative until they become leitmotivs‚ recurring phrases- like the expression “So it goes”: I‚ Billy Pilgrim‚ will die‚ have died‚ and always will die on February thirteenth‚ 1976. (141) Addressing the
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In the Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut‚ we are introduced to the main character‚ Billy Pilgrim. He is an average guy‚ who has no special qualities‚ however‚ does have the ability to travel through time. My interpretation of the reading and Billy’s time travel is that he suffers from a traumatic mental illness‚ which could have led‚ him to hallucinate his time travels and alien abduction. There are two connections I found that could have encouraged Billy’s behavior‚ becoming a prisoner of war
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