Main Themes In Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five

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Kurt Vonnegut Junior is a praised author as well as a veteran of World War II, his well-known novel, Slaughterhouse Five, allowing him to put his experiences of the war into writing, though it’s much more fictionalized than one would think. Slaughterhouse Five is an anti-war novel that comments on various topics of war; how war desensitized soldiers to death (both during the war and post-war), the gruesome daily life the prisoners of wars carried, and indirect advocation against the Vietnam War. One of the main themes in Vonnegut’s book is the phrase “So it goes.” The main character in the book, Billy Pilgrim, uses this term whenever a character dies. His reasoning for using this term is out of the ordinary, Pilgrim claims he was abducted by an alien race called the “Tralfamadorians” who utter the phrase each time someone dies. Pilgrim explains, When a Tralfamadorian sees a corpse, all he thinks is that the dead person is in bad condition in that particular moment, but that the same person is just fine in plenty of other moments. Now, when I myself hear that somebody is dead, I simply shrug and say what the Deaths are insignificant when you’ve seen millions of unknown corpses, and even friends and family die, there’s nothing more than they’re dead. It’s noted by Billy Pilgrim’s daughter, Barbara, that he’d only began recalling that he’d been abducted by aliens after a fatal plane crash, in which he was the only survivor, attributing the delusions to brain damage (38). Desensitization is defined as the diminished emotional responsiveness to a negative or aversive stimulus after repeated exposure to it (The Corsini Encyclopedia of Psychology and Behavioral Science). This definition fits Pilgrim’s reactions to death, as well as the Tralfamadorians aphorism for how they deal with

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