Analysis Of Vonnegut's Journey In Slaughterhouse Five

707 Words2 Pages

Lauraly Gonzalez
Mrs. Jarrell
Research Paper
21 April, 2017
Billy Pilgrim, A Captivating Character
Within the complex seesaw storyline in Slaughterhouse-five, Vonnegut contributed his war experiences in the main character, Billy Pilgrim. Along with these horrific memories during World War Ⅱ , the element of time travel is evident in the novel, allowing Billy to repress these painful memories and follow the philosophy he learned on Tralfamador. Despite his nonchalant attitude towards death itself throughout the novel, Billy is an alienated individual with the philosophy that he can do nothing to change the destruction brought about by people and uses time travel to avoid seeing the human suffering that he cannot accept, brought about in Dresden, …show more content…

Throughout the novel, one of the author's style of writing was to jumble events up, ranging from Billy’s experiences in war to his simplistic life as an optometrist. In each and every instant that something similar happened between two moments in his life, Billy would either jump forward in time or go back, as far as his birth. One particular distinct event that should have made Billy rewind to but did not was the horrendous Dresden bombing. That dreadful and fearful event that arose as his time as a prisoner of war was much to gruesome to endure more than the initial time. He does not wish to see human suffering simply because he cannot accept it. This constant time travel that Billy undertakes never occurs at the moment the bombing took place. During the novel, when this event was approaching, the soonest Billy visited was the before the bombing. This disaster had a powerful impact on Billy since with his knowledge he had gained from Tralfamador, he understands that he cannot change that moment of his past. It brings more relief to him to “sustain his daughter’s scolding than it is to endure the fire-bombing once again.” (qtd. In Schatt Stanley. "Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.EXPLORING Novels, Gale, 2003.) This portrays how, compared to having to face the destruction of a city and innocent civilians, a

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