Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five Essay

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In Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five, published amidst the turbulent social and political landscape of the late 1960s, the narrative unfolds as a multi-layered commentary on the nature of war, drawing parallels between the atrocities of World War II and the contentious backdrop of the Vietnam War era. Against the backdrop of historical upheaval and cultural disillusionment, Slaughterhouse Five emerges as a poignant exploration of the futility and absurdity of armed conflict, serving as both an indictment of past atrocities and a timely critique of contemporary military interventions. Considering the context of what was happening at the time the novel was published and what goes on in the novel, Slaughterhouse-Five can be interpreted as both …show more content…

Vonnegut’s anti-war sentiments are interesting, considering that during the time frame the novel is set, people generally viewed World War II as a good thing for America, like a victory to be proud of. Also, in his novel, Vonnegut expresses his anti-war sentiments by exposing the disillusionment many soldiers felt both during and after the war. Several times throughout the novel, Billy uses the phrase “so it goes,” which could be an example of how he has learned to function as a traumatized person, “And Billy had seen the greatest massacre in European history, which was the fire-bombing of Dresden. So it goes.” The repetition of the phrase “so it goes” could be Billy repressing his trauma and playing it down. The way Billy seems to be handling his trauma (shrugging it off and saying the equivalent to “it is what it is”) could be Vonnegut’s way of criticizing the way soldiers were expected to simply assimilate back into civilian society after the …show more content…

Billy has gone to sleep, a senile widower, and awakened on his wedding day.Billy is spastic in time, has no control over where he is going next, and the trips aren’t necessarily fun” (Vonnegut 29). Because Billy seems to be floating around in time, it would be fair to say that the non-linear structure of the novel allows Vonnegut to capture the cycle-like nature of trauma, where certain memories or images recur obsessively, like intrusive thoughts that refuse to be silenced. By repeating certain key events, such as the bombing of Dresden, throughout the narrative, Vonnegut emphasizes the persistent grip that trauma holds on Billy's psyche, underscoring its haunting and inescapable presence. Because this trauma was caused by World War II, it can be inferred that it is a critique on Vonnegut’s part aimed at the way society expected soldiers to go straight back to normal life after serving their time. Though it may not be the center of Slaughterhouse Five, the Vietnam War does show up sporadically throughout the

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