Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Slaughterhouse-Five Chapter 6 Post 2 of 2

      Billy Pilgrim wakes up in chapter six after spending the night pumped up on morphine. He awakes very fatigued and sore, but he feels a strange "pull" coming behind him. Pilgrim describes it as, "animal magnetism which made him shiver and itch," (Vonnegut, 136). This odd description of "animal magnetism" gives it the feel of a living power. The lumps were pea-shaped and a small horseshoe shape. This new discoveries bring up many questions since they "could work miracles for him." The only catch around them is that he could not inquire what these beastly objects were.
      The lumps in Billy's coat are put there by Vonnegut for more of a morality lesson rather than usefulness. Not able to inquire about the living, animal trinkets makes for a very inhuman response from Billy who is complacent with not knowing. Even today, all living things share a curiosity as an inborn instinct. Vonnegut describes the forces like an animal; however, these lumps require oneself to destroy the living or beastly quality of curiosity and knowledge. The polarity and contradiction associated with the lumps in Billy's coat makes one wonder if it is better to break the rules to discover the truth.

Slaughterhouse-Five Chapter 6 Post 1 of 2

      Chapter five of Slaughterhouse really starts to get heavy within the plot and brings up a very interesting allusion. An allusion is a, often indirect, reference to someone or something that is known from history, literature, religion, politics, or other branch of culture. In Slaughterhouse-Five, the allusion is brought by the odd, magical lumps in Pilgrim's coat. The lumps allude to the biblical story of Lot's wife from chapter one. Vonnegut read the Gideon Bible and about the destruction of Gomorrah and Sodom which spoke of Lot's wife's actions and conviction. In the biblical story, Lot's wife is able to take a lasting glance at the destruction of the cities but only to be turned into a pillar of salt. Lot's wife knows the punishment but looks back anyway. A counterpoint to this is Billy Pilgrim. He was directed not to look at the magnetizing lumps and was O.K. with that. At first discovery, "He was told not to find out what the lumps were...they could work miracles for him, provided he did not insist on learning their nature. That was all right with Billy Pilgrim," (Vonnegut, 137) The event of the lumps alludes back to this biblical story.

Monday, July 30, 2012

Slaughterhouse-Five Chapter 5 Post 2 of 2

       Kurt Vonnegut as the author of Slaughterhouse-Five has done something extremely rare to see in a non-autobiographical piece: he has made himself a character in his own book. Not as the main character, Vonnegut put himself as a minor character that often finds himself in very unfavorable situations. In the later half of chapter five, Vonnegut appears, "excreting everything but his brains;" then addresses himself saying, "That was I. That was me. That was the author of this book," (Vonnegut, 125). 
      Vonnegut places himself in this book because its themes and story line share a strong connection to his life. In all the accounts of war, Vonnegut is speaking of his own experiences of war. Interestingly, Vonnegut has Billy Pilgrim be the main character of this book, while he only inserts himself in small pockets. Vonnegut was the drunken caller with the mustard gas breath and then again here in chapter five as a sickly fool in a latrine. 

Slaughterhouse-Five Chapter 5 Post 1 of 2

    Slaughterhouse-Five presents an ongoing and very important motif throughout the novel but which going  mainly in chapter five. A motif is a recurring phrase or idea used throughout a work, unifying the current situation to previous ones, or new ideas to a theme. In Slaughterhouse, the motif present is "so it goes." Learned from the Tralfamadorians, Pilgrim then incorporates this into his own thinking. The motif is exemplified in this excerpt, "Before they got their names and numbers in that book, they were missing in action and probably dead. So it goes," (Vonnegut, 91).
    The "so it goes" mentality really advocates that the deceased is only dead in that point in time because that is how it is structured. In other fragments of their life and in time, they are alive. The Tralfamadorians do not get sad about this because the understand this way of thinking. This motif really connects with the theme of free will. Saying "so it goes" is basically saying that that is how destiny goes and their is nothing one can do to break the mold or change it. This connection makes it a substantial motif in Slaughterhouse-Five

Friday, July 27, 2012

Slaughterhouse-Five Chapter 4 Post 2 of 2

      Chapter four opens with Billy Pilgrim wandering around his house at night and the phone ringing: "Billy answered. There was a drunk on the other end. Billy could almost smell his breath-- mustard gas and roses. It was the wrong number," (Vonnegut, 73). This familiar mustard gas and rose combination comes back from chapter one. In fact, the drunk seems to align with Vonnegut from chapter one. Vonnegut makes drunken calls at night and Billy received one on this night of his kidnapping. Pilgrim said that he could almost smell mustard gas and roses. This odd combination seems to have a greater significance then a breath description.
      The mustard gas, which is used as a chemical weapon, highlights the war part of the novel. The roses seem to draw in a gentle, even romantic ties. With both of these infused in Vonnegut, the drunk's, breath, it shows that the war has affected his life deeply. In addition, it also has affected his relationship and family.  
     

Slaughterhouse-Five Chapter 4 Post 1 of 2

       In chapter four, a very accurate and interesting analogy is made. The analogy, a comparison made between two things to show their similarity, is made between Pilgrim's time jumping and a blob of amber. The Tralfamadorians say that the moment in time Pilgrim is like a bug in amber; it simply exists. When the aliens say, "It does not change. It does not lend itself to warnings or explanations. It simply is. Take it moment by moment, and you will find that we are all, as I've said before, bugs in amber," (Vonnegut, 86), it clearly depicts the analogy Vonnegut had procured in this literary work. The structure that is time, and everything moving along within it, simply exists, different at every moment.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Slaughter-House Five Chapter 3 Post 2 of 2

       Slaughter-House Five's third chapter has Billy Pilgrim in a rather bad state. Pilgrim is beginning to demonstrate the hopelessness of war. He is also has shown no ability to control his time trips and did several jumps in chapter three. On one account he jumped back to working at his Optometrist practice. Pilgrim's condition was summed up by Vonnegut in this brief description, "Now Billy was starting to get worried about it, about his mind in general. He tried to remember how old he was, couldn't. He tried to remember what year it was. He couldn't remember that either," (Vonnegut, 56). This present state is very contradictory to the optimism seen in the Serenity Prayer plaque on his office wall.
      The interesting point in the Serenity Prayer that ties into the book is the line saying, "God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change." There is an theme in Slaughterhouse about not being able to control things in life. The Serenity Prayer's words just further explain what is happening to Billy Pilgrim in this point in the novel. Pilgrim is unable to control his time tripping; therefore, life has almost become meaningless.  Rather, he needs the serenity to accept that.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Slaughterhouse-Five Chapter 3 Post 1 of 2

      In this chapter, Vonnegut really displays the stream of consciousness style to probe and explain Billy Pilgrim's mind. Vonnegut uses the stream of consciousness to open the workings of Pilgrim's mind and his time jumping problem. Vonnegut depicts him fading in and out of events in his life, and sometimes almost simultaneously in transition. At one point, "he was simultaneously on foot in Germany in 1944 and riding his Cadillac in 1967," (Vonnegut, 58). These sometimes difficult transitions to follow for a reader are perfectly explained by Pilgrim's stream of consciousness written by Vonnegut.
     The inner workings of Billy's mind are quite complex and somewhat mysterious this early in the novel. However, the time jumping qualities are better explained by Vonnegut using this tool. By Vonnegut walking the reader through each jump, by even giving a date, helps the stream to be followed. The magnificent travel of Pilgrim occurs very 'spur of the moment', "He closed his eyes, and opened them again. He was still weeping, but he was back in Luxembourg again," (Vonnegut, 58). Vonnegut using the stream of consciousness is crucial to Slaughterhouse-Five.

Monday, July 16, 2012

Slaughterhouse-Five Chapter 2 Post 2 of 2

     Chapter two establishes that Billy Pilgrim "has come unstuck in time...He has walked through a door in 1955 and come out another one in 1941." Pilgrim jumps around in the time stream without any control (or at least at the present moment in the novel he has no control). This idea of time travel captivates almost all readers of Vonnegut's novel. With the positives and negatives of this "power", one must think what is actually traveling the expanse of time: is it Pilgrim's body, soul, or just mind? Or on a more focused note, what is time travel?
   To the common definition, time travel is one entity leaving the time stream and re-entering at a different point; however, one can travel through time with just the power of mind. In a memory of a past event, in one's mind, they are truly there in that moment. What makes it different than the actual event? In a memory, everything pans out exactly as it occurred; moreover, the memory eliminates any free will. In Slaughterhouse- Five, it does not seem as though Billy Pilgrim changes anything when he is thrust to a different point in time. He simple lives in that moment again. This time travel event could be just a mental lapse or terrible daydream that make Pilgrim feel as though he traveled through time.

Slaughterhouse-Five Chapter 2 Post 1 of 2

      Heading into chapter two, Vonnegut sets up the very bizarre external conflict between Billy Pilgrim and  basically his whole society. His daughter, Barbara, most openly confronts Billy about his odd opinion on his experience with extraterrestrials. The external conflict arises because Billy believes he had been abducted by Tralfamadorians and decides he wants to let all of New York know about it. Billy goes on a radio show to share his unique experience with these time-savvy creatures. As if that was not enough, Billy Pilgrim publishes letters of the account. His daughter is horrified by her father's psychotic actions and beliefs. Soon his entire society tags him as an insane man.
     Barbara displays her seriousness of the conflict by saying, "what are we going to do with you? Are you going to force us to put you where your mother is?" Vonnegut then goes to explain, "Billy's mother was still alive. She was in bed in an old people's home.." (Vonnegut, 29). The quote show that Barbara now thinks she will have to remove her father from society to solve the problem. This external conflict early on really gets Vonnegut's plot rolling. It sets up the readers intrigue on the fact that Billy Pilgrim thinks he was abducted by aliens and, later in the chapter, his mind jumps around time to add to the pandemonium.

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Slaughterhouse-Five Chapter 1 Post 2 of 2

     An interesting component Vonnegut puts into the primary chapter of Slaughterhouse is the mention of how he vows to call his book The Children's Crusade. Vonnegut vows this to make sure he does not glorify the war, or him and his fellow soldiers. I thought this was a very interesting detail. The soldiers, naive and scared as children, were blundering into war. As I was reading this my mind jumped to make a somewhat stretched connection to an interview I had recently watched. The interview was with the lead singer of the All American Rejects, Tyson Ritter. Ritter was speaking about the band's new record and with regard to its meaning. Ritter said that it was about the metamorphosis from a kid to an adult. This detail that really struck me is how Ritter said that even as an adult, their are times when you revert back to that childish or naive way of life.
    Ritter then elaborated of the time in his life when he moved out to Los Angeles and got caught up in poisonous temptations. Growing up in Stillwater, Oklahoma, Ritter had not really been exposed to the wickedness of a large city. Ritter said that when he moved out there he was like a kid again, with no inhabitions. This can be related to Vonnegut's title of book The Children's Crusade in the regard that him and his fellow comrades had never experienced that war. Therefore, as they ventured into the battlefield, it was like they were an unknowing, unrestrained kid again. Though the relationship between war and LA are very different and the comparison is somewhat crude, the overall principles are the same. Tyson Ritter's experience does not represent a different lesson than Vonnegut's crusade in SH 5.

Slaughterhouse-Five Chapter 1 Post 1 of 2

      Vonnegut immediately indicates his unique style in this opening chapter. The book opens more as an autobiography rather than a fiction novel. Vonnegut utilizes this style to demonstrate his insane involvement in this literary pierce. He places this autobiographical taste in ones mouth by saying, "I really did go back to Dresden with Guggenheim money (God love it) in 1967. It looked a lot like Dayton, Ohio..." (Vonnegut, 1). Vonnegut uses common relations and small, humorous opinions that immediately draw the reader into the novel and ultimately Vonnegut's overall style of writing.
     By focusing in on the quote, three stylistic points can be extracted from Vonnegut's early words. First Vonnegut emphasizes his actions by saying, "I really did go back to Dresden..." It is almost as if Vonnegut thinks the reader doubts his immediate explanation in the first couple sentences of the novel. This is a good example of Vonnegut's unique style. Second, on looks at his personalized excerpt: "(God love it)." This humorous note continues to bolster the autobiographical feel. The third point of Vonnegut's style from the above quote is his reference to Dayton. In everyday conversation, when one explains an event to his/her listener, one always makes references to a well known place to allow for a more accurate image. Vonnegut's reference keeps true to his personal style.