Tralfamadorians In Slaughterhouse Five

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In the novel Slaughterhouse Five, Kurt Vonnegut illustrates a life which is spastic in time. Vonnegut’s character Billy Pilgrim is used as a representation of himself, and the Tralfamadorians are characters which are used as a validation aspect in Vonnegut’s life. The Tralfamadorians have a motto of “So it goes”, this is said after every death, this is to show the Tralfamadorians belief that although a person dies he only appears to die. He is still very much alive in the past. Billy’s life is spastic in time, he is constantly going back and forth between different times in his life, past, present and future. The Tralfamadorians are there to remind him that everything that happens is destined, and he can’t change what is already predetermined. …show more content…

Why us for that matter? Why anything? Because this moment simply is. Have you ever seen bugs trapped in amber?… Well, here we are, Mr. Pilgrim, trapped in the amber of this moment. There is no why.” In multiple ways, the Tralfamadorians are able to be compared to the Germans. The first thing the Germans do when Billy gets to the prison camp is to make yikm take off his clothes, which is also the first thing that Tralfamadorians do when Billy gets to their planet. When a German prison guard punches a man in the face and the man asks why, the German guard answers with “Vy you? Vy anybody?” In correlation, the Tralfamadorians refuse to consider the question of “why” when they abducted Billy they simply said “There is no why.” But above all, the Tralfamadorians much like the Germans, completely remove Billy’s choices, they take him captive and there is nothing he can do about it. He’s forced to live, from what he believes, in a dome on Tralfamadore - just as he is forced to live in a slaughterhouse in Dresden. The lessons that the Tralfamadorians teach Billy about time is somewhat a blessing in disguise. It comforts Billy to think that time is completely predetermined and unchangeable. This Tralfamadorian faith within the pointlessness of trying to change anything makes Billy feel as if everything he has gone through, regardless of how awful, could not have happened any differently. We also have to think whether it is somewhat wrong that Billy’s idea of Tralfamadorian philosophy frees him from taking any blame or responsibility for his own actions. He takes full control over the thought of the Tralfamadores because then it fully stops him from even trying to change the way things are. Billy doesn't prevent his son from going to war nor does he try to remind people of the bombing of Dresden. Nevertheless Billy actively chooses to spread the news of Tralfamadore, telling people that it is okay that he has suffered and he will die

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