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Analysis Of Kurt Vonnegut 's ' Slaughterhouse Five ' Essay

Decent Essays

Natalie Lubben
December 5, 2016
Rhetorical Analysis Essay Draft
Slaughterhouse-five
War is a virus, a plagues our world and has experienced since the early ages of time. Once a war is cured a new strain begins stronger and more unforgiving as the last. Humans are creatures of habit which continue the violence. Kurt Vonnegut’s novel, slaughterhouse-five, is a deliberate and well developed statement against war as expressed through the tone, rhetoric, and characters, making anti war a prominent theme through the entirety of the novel. Slaughterhouse-five advocates for the prevention of war and all the terrible consequences that follow. Kurt Vonnegut 's seemingly parallel relationship with the main character of the novel, Billy Pilgrim, and the parallels of other characters to real life individual paints a more vivid and real wickedness to war. “All this happened, more or less. The war parts, anyway, are pretty much true” (1). In the first line of the novel Vonnegut declares his credibility. In 1944, Kurt Vonnegut served in Europe and fought in the Battle of the Bulge. After this battle, Vonnegut was captured and became a prisoner of war. He was in Dresden, Germany, during the Allied firebombing of the city and saw the complete devastation caused by it. Vonnegut himself escaped harm only because he, along with other POWs (prisoners of war), were working in an underground meat locker making vitamin supplements. Similarly Billy Pilgrim, the main character of

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