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The Dehumanization In Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five

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So long as mankind inhabits the Earth will there be war, death, and destruction. Since the beginning of time, there have been opposites. Even before man had the ability to rationalize theories were there unalike aspects of life. Every quality depends on the existence of its own opposite, or it would not at all exist. Therefore it goes without saying that suffering and death (two entities closely associated with war) are inevitable. These attributes, both negative in nature, are inescapable ills of this world. “What he meant, of course, was that there would always be wars, that they were as easy to stop as glaciers.” Kurt Vonnegut’s account of the destructiveness of warfare desensitizes and dehumanizes Billy Pilgrim in his novel, Slaughterhouse-Five, and in a greater sense, humanity as a whole. In short, Slaughterhouse-Five follows a man through his ability to cope with life before, …show more content…

Include genocide, time travel, mental illness, and aliens and one could create something along the lines of Vonnegut’s piece of writing. Follow Billy Pilgrim’s life through constant encounters with near-death experiences and watch his human nature be stripped away to leave behind a numb, hollow vessel.

Regardless of the angle in which Slaughterhouse-Five is approached, there is no escaping the destructive properties of warfare the book entails. The novel chronicles Billy Pilgrim, a New York man who has become “unstuck in time.” As a result, the narrative is structured in sections, jumping back and forth through time and space. Billy begins the novel a boy, already dealing with the perils of life from the bottom of a swimming pool. He grows to become a rather awkward and unattractive adolescent who enrolls in an Optometry school only to be drafted into the army during World War II. A weak youth, his battle skills land him a prisoner of war behind German lines. Throw in a nervous breakdown, morphine, brutal living conditions, and the

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