Comparing Pilgrim's Slaughterhouse-Five: Life And Death

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Synopsis
Slaughterhouse Five is the story of Billy Pilgrim who has become “unstuck in time.” He travels back and forth being able to see his birth, death, and all the years between his birth and death. During the times he travels back and forth they either happen repeatedly or out of order. A major theme in Slaughterhouse-Five would be War and Death. In the beginning of the story, Billy Pilgrim talks about the bombing of Dresden, which it killed almost 100,000 Germans. Some parts of the story are based on Vonnegut experiences. Vonnegut survived a war which it could lead to having some kind of lasting effect on him. In chapter one Billy or Vonnegut, goes to Dresden again with his old friend Bernard O'Hare. Where he meets his wife and sensed …show more content…

In both stories, traumatic events illustrate the world is not fair. The bombing of Dresden in Slaughterhouse-five and the guilty verdict in the trial of Meursault’s trial in The Stranger show the lack of justice in the world. In both books also innocent people suffer a not earned fate. When Billy took a trip to Dresden, he described it “like a Sunday school picture of Heaven,” (Vonnegut, 148) which they treated the prisoners of war as decent as is possible displaying humanity. This is similar to the shooting of “the Arab,” Meursault demonstrates throughout the book that his intentions are unintentional. In both of these examples, people are just trying to live and survive, yet the universe is indifferent about the situations. The difference between books is free will. In Slaughterhouse-Five Billy has no control of the events and everything is already planned for him. “Billy Pilgrim could not change were the past, the present, and the future” (Vonnegut, 60.) This specifies the nonexistence of free will in the book. In The Stranger, free will is shown through Meursault’s experiences and decisions. The protagonist of the Slaughterhouse-Five is Billy Pilgrim, he is a WWII veteran and a survivor of the firebombing of Dresden. He believes that he has “come unstuck in time.” The protagonist of The Stranger is Meursault, he is a figure that views and describes almost

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