preview

Slaughterhouse-Five: A Literary Analysis

Decent Essays
Open Document

Slaughterhouse Five is a novel that follows the story of Billy Pilgrim, a man who has “come unstuck in time” and who was also captured in the Battle of the Bulge, taken prisoner by the Germans, and kept in a slaughterhouse during the Dresden bombings. Once Billy is unstuck in time he is able to see his life events out of order in a third person perspective. He is able to realize his purpose in life and realize his mistakes he made along the way through this process. Billy along with the reader realizes the connections Vonnegut makes to humanity power and language while on this journey. Although Billy is experiencing his life out of order the book is still very logical in the sense that Vonnegut puts the pieces to his life's purpose in the order he is seeing his life. …show more content…

The novel was published towards the end of Vietnam war which Vonnegut actually trained to be in. His personal views and beliefs were very clear throughout the novel but often get misinterpreted. The novel is commonly perceived as an anti-war story but this is just a misconception. Vonnegut wanted to show the gruesome reality of war through symbolism. The main symbol used is the slaughterhouse itself to represent war. This is the main part of the story where Vonnegut use irony how a slaughterhouse is their safe place after a bombing. With this symbol he is really saying people like the product but not the process. Vonnegut is really pushing his ideas of humanity and power through this symbol throughout the novel. He is really trying to show the problems with humanity for his “definition”, when he shows the destructiveness of war but people glorifying it into the only admirable way to die. He wants to show war is full of negative and destructive things and there are others ways to lift to the

Get Access