Slaughterhouse-Five Themes

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“I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity” - Dwight D. Eisenhower. Kurt Vonnegut explains even when you don’t write about yourself, you will be writing about yourself. Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut is semi-autobiographical novel that depicts the story of Billy Pilgrim and explores the theme of war, and expresses Kurt Vonnegut’s anti-war thoughts. Kurt Vonnegut’s real life experience led him to develop such horrible feelings about war and led him to write about this feeling.
A cracked helmet represents the war theme presented throughout the book while the crack reveals the meaning behind the bloodshed, the lives lost, and casualties occurred. Billy Pilgrim’s time at Dresden was a horrific experience. A cracked helmet corresponds with the book in ways such as in war and bombings; one would wear a helmet to protect themselves through these times. While helmets are a sense of protection, the crack within the helmet is a symbol that the …show more content…

I chose a shade of gravel grey to symbolize through all the destruction, rubble is thrown around the air making it hard to breathe; making the air so thick one can barely see and survive. “So it goes” is written on the front of the helmet as people are just looking for protection, they still face causalities and still experience death. “So it goes” is written in red to demonstrate the casualties that are presented throughout the book and the blood taken from them. The color red is bled through and blurry in such a way as it is hard to read, the destruction of war is a blurry concept to understand. One cannot think of an extreme amount of casualties and bombs destructing so many things. A grey helmet, and “so it goes” written in red is strong proponent of the helmet being tied together, it symbolizes the destruction of war and the casualties that

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