Literary Analysis Of Joseph Heller's 'Catch-22'

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I chose the book “Catch-22” for the simple reason that it was on the reading list and, conveniently, I saw it in a bookstore at which a friend of my Grandmother works. So, I bought it, not knowing how much I would absolutely enjoy it. Now, we’ve all heard the term “Catch-22.” It basically describes a loop of things that depend upon each other to exist, for example you need A to have B, but in order for there to be an A, there must be a B. It’s an almost paradoxical loop that catches us all off guard a little bit. Thankfully, a man named Joseph Heller was kind enough to take this profound absurdity and make it into an entire novel. In the story of “Catch-22,” we take a look at a U.S. Military (I believe the Army, to be more precise) squadron …show more content…

To begin with, one of the main characters (Lieutenant Scheisskopf) has a hidden meaning in his name. The word scheisskopf actually means (and I apologize for the expletive) s*** head in German which, is funny and ironic on two levels given that the Lieutenant is a bit of an idiot in the book and he’s also very patriotic/anti-German! Also, before the term “Catch-22 was” created, the other numbers in the running were “Catch-18” and “Catch-14.” Thirdly, Joseph Heller didn’t really know that Catch-22 was very funny (or funny at all) until he heard his neighbor laughing and reading it! And then there is a bit of a deeper piece of trivia that I think should be shared. In the book, there is a point when Yossarian is sharing some of the funny and unanswerable questions that he asks at intelligence meetings, those being “Why is Hitler,” “Who is Spain,” and “When is right.” However, there is one question that he asks which is truly complicated. He asks “Where are the Snowdens of yesteryear.” This of course, as is revealed at the end of the book, refers to Snowden, who died on his first day, before even being registered, thus making it so that he did not exist. But this question actually goes to a different piece of literature, François Villon’s “Ballade des dames du temps jadis” or “The Dance of the Ladies of the Past.” Here, each stanza is always ended with the question “Oh, where are the snows of yesteryear?” The whole poem is about all of the beautiful women, lost in time, never to be seen or heard again (at least that’s what I gathered from it). So, Yossarian alluded to this poem, and therefore metaphorically asking “Where are all of the other nineteen year-old boys who were killed and forgotten about?” Catch-22 has been rated among the highest and best books of the twentieth century by (but not limited to) Modern Library, Radcliffe Publishing, The Guardian, TIME, and the BBC’s Big

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