How Does Vonnegut Use Cohesion In Slaughterhouse Five

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Kurt Vonnegut’s Voice, Cohesion, and Rhythm in Slaughterhouse-Five
Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-five (1969) has been acclaimed by scholars for decades specifically for Vonnegut’s iconic, albeit unusual use of voice, cohesion, and rhythm. In Slaughterhouse-five Vonnegut uses a very unique voice that has come to define most of Vonnegut’s work, specifically his use of dark humor, meta-fiction, informality, disassociation; and the famous line, “So it goes” that appears 106 times in the novel. Vonnegut’s cohesion, or more accurately lack thereof, is unique to Slaughterhouse-five as the story is told in a nonlinear order that uses various flashbacks, time travel, and “sticking” in and out of time and space to tell the tale of the main character Billy Pilgrim. Shifting from first- to third-person point of view frequently, Vonnegut alters the rhythm of the novel. To provide apologies …show more content…

According to Critelli (2014), “it was slightly difficult to understand the rhythm of Vonnegut’s writing pattern. It was confusing for me to understand the switch from first person to third person narrative”. Vonnegut jumps from first to third person point of view frequently in the novel. There are three instances where Vonnegut directly inserts himself into the novel, such as when he is describing the Allied firebombing of the German city of Dresden, “That was I. That was me. That was the author of this book.” (p. 125). Vonnegut does this to give credibility to that part of the book as he was physically in Dresden as an American POW during the bombing. Thus, Vonnegut takes on an omniscient point of view in the novel by being both part of an above the action. This omniscient point of view allows Vonnegut to tell the reader about events on Earth and on the alien planet of Tralfamadore at any given point in space and time giving the reader insights as to the characters’ perceptions

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