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Catch 22 Satire

Decent Essays

Joseph Heller’s satirical novel, Catch-22, received mixed reactions when it first appeared on the literary scene. Published in postwar 1961, the powerful satire embedded within the pages of Catch-22 found acclaim and recognition amidst much criticism for its blatant anti-war message. The now infamous tale of Yossarian’s plight within the air force of World War II has gained popularity and praise over the years for the clever way in which Heller communicates “the absurdity and self-perpetuating insanity of bureaucracies, particularly military bureaucracies.” (Allbery) Heller tears down society’s glorified image of war by taking his readers deep into the soldiers’ world, a world in which there is a marked absence of independent thought, where the worst in human nature is prevalent, and where violence purely for violence’s sake becomes the new norm. Heller manages to turn the indisputable ‘good’ war, World War II, into a shamble of red tape and senseless violence by revealing the painful futility of fighting wars laden with the weight of bureaucratic ineffectiveness, irrationality, and unadulterated lunacy. Heller makes the case that war, regardless of the era or location, is simply a violent game played by leaders behind safe desks, far away from any danger. The pointless death and brutality that accompanies war is a focal point in Catch-22. Heller illustrates the absurdity of war through his characters’ various reactions to the carnage engulfing them and through graphic descriptions of that violence. As Yossarian ironically points out, he prefers life inside a hospital as opposed to the battlefield because “They couldn’t dominate Death inside the hospital, but they certainly made her behave.” (165) In the hospital, soldiers “didn’t explode into blood and clotted matter. They didn’t drown or get struck by lightning, mangled by machinery or crushed in landslides. They didn’t get shot to death…People bled to death like gentlemen in an operating room or expired without comment in an oxygen tent.” (166) Heller’s praise of death within a hospital as opposed to fighting on the front line further proves how horrible and senseless war is for those who are forced to risk their lives for the ‘greater good’.

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