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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 the destructive social impact of science and technology. <br> <br>I. Kurt Vonnegut has a great awareness of the destructive social impact of science and technology. <br>A. Contraptions that Vonnegut calls "social transplants" replace contact with the awful real relatives and friends with synthetic ones. <br>1. Computers minimize human contact even better than TV’s and CD players with headphones can. <br>2. Vonnegut voices his hate of the computer because it is a nervous system outside of our

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    Black Humor

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    However‚ in Kurt Vonnegut’s anti-war novel‚ Slaughterhouse-Five‚ he laughs at all of them through the use of black humor. Vonnegut uses black humor as a way to criticize societies in all of his novels‚ but most notably in Slaughterhouse-Five (Klinkowitz). He uses black humor to criticize peoples’ glorification of war and make humor of death‚ Christ‚ and inhumanity. Vonnegut uses an array of situations to ironically make death humorous. Such as when Billy is training to become a solder‚ his father

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    Cat's Cradle Analysis

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    The World According to Kurt Vonnegut By simply looking at the tile of Kurt Vonnegut’s novel Cat’s Cradle the reader can gain extensive insight into the mindset and mysteries of life that puzzled and excited Vonnegut. Cat’s Cradle is a child’s game which holds certain significance in the novel for little Newt‚ the son of the man who created the atomic bomb‚ and it is often referenced in throughout course of the novel in regards to lies that people tell themselves and others to make them happy. The

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    The Price of Equality

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    accept in our lifetime? Kurt Vonnegut provides us with the combination of conflict and symbols‚ along with the characters of George and Hazel Bergeron‚ to reveal the theme of the dangers that total equality presents to a society that foolishly accepts the forced control of their freedoms by the government. By understanding details and parts of Vonnegut’s life experiences‚ “Harrison Bergeron” becomes a refreshing story‚ with a deeper meaning beneath the surface. Vonnegut is successful in achieving

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    been as enduring over time as Kurt Vonnegut ’s Slaughterhouse-Five. Slaughterhouse-Five is a personal novel which draws upon Vonnegut ’s experience ’s as a scout in World War Two‚ his capture and becoming a prisoner of war‚ and his witnessing of the fire bombing of Dresden in February of 1945 (the greatest man-caused massacre in history). The novel is about the life and times of a World War Two veteran named Billy Pilgrim. In Slaughterhouse-Five‚ Kurt Vonnegut uses structure and point of view to

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    Slaughter House-Five

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    Slaughterhouse Five‚ by Kurt Vonnegut‚ is a novel in which the laws of physics are broken -- apparently. Billy Pilgrim‚ the main character‚ is loose in time and is free‚ though not in control‚ to experience any moment of his life‚ including the moments before he was born and after he dies (experienced as hues with sustained sounds). At random times in the main sequence of his life he literally jumps to other times‚ something which he is fully aware of. He can be on Tralfamadore one

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    from jail. Harrison appears in the studio where the ballerinas are dancing and takes of his handicaps‚ which included his red nose‚ transmitter‚ and weights. He also‚ declares himself as the emperor‚ and “everybody should do as [he] says at once” (Vonnegut). Harrison chooses an empress and commands the orchestra to play beautiful music. As they dance‚ they jump in to the air‚ reaching the climax of the story‚ and defy the laws of gravity and motion. The Handicapper General‚ Diana Moon Glampers‚ arrives

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    Breakfast of Champions

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    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. The story tells about their journey in detail and explains how each man perceives and reacts to

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    ENG102 A Naive Need for Social Equity In his science fiction‚ satirical short story‚ “Harrison Bergeron” (1961)‚ Kurt Vonnegut presents a society in which all people are handicapped to be equal‚ normal‚ average‚ despite being born with different genetics and abilities to explicate the downfalls of the American people’s fear as well as need to be equal in Vonnegut’s time. He develops this ideal through a story about the Bergerons‚ who are presently watching an average ballet in a manner that

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