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Slaughterhouse Five By Kurt Vonnegut

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Throughout the novel Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut Barry Sadler singer of the song Ballad of the Green Beret and novelist Kurt Vonnegut maintain comparable tones regarding their literature pieces representing the war and the underlying image that is portrayed by the Green Beret. Sadler insightfully states that the impacts that committed soldiers fought through and the sacrifices their families had endured: represents honor, courage, and is described as jingoistic. It is an exceptionally sentimental song that displays astounding pride in Americans as he delineates his observations. “Fighting soldiers from the sky, fearless men who jump and die, men who mean just what they say. The brave men of the Green Beret”, these soldiers last request were to make their sons America’s best. In the novel Slaughterhouse Five Vonnegut’s attitude towards war begins to contradict Sadler’s, he advises his own sons that under no circumstance should they participate in war massacres, nor shall they be satisfied by the killing of enemies or work for companies that produce machinery for war. Massacres in the perspective of Vonnegut are brutal, there is nothing intelligent about then as he embodies a prominent antiwar stance due to his horrific experience in war. In the story Vonnegut describes the marine who continuously shares experiences of the war; he questions Billy’s feelings of pride in his sons and recent accomplishments of being a Green Beret. In Vietnam Billy responds the way he

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