Sunday, January 3, 2016

On page 117, Billy is on Tralfamadore in the zoo there where many Tralfamadorians come to get a sight of him. They ask him questions about himself and about Earth. Once, Billy speaks of all the wars on Earth and asks the Tralfamadorians how they are so peacefull on their planet. The say that they have lots of wars but at the moment it is peaceful. Through the Tralfamadorians ability to see life on a line of whenever they want, they don't have to focus on the bad things, like wars. "There isn't anything we can do about them, so we simply don't look at them. We ignore them. We spend eternity looking at pleasant moments." (117) This idea has interesting comparisons to other ideas that I taken from Billy through the book. In some ways agree with how the Tralfamadorians look at war. War and fighting is in our nature as people. Total world peace is impossible because there will always be people that don't agree with one another. That is one of the great things about humans. And so, wars are inevitable. They are always going to happen through time. They are dark moments for us but very important all the same. The world is the way it is today because of wars. The Tralfamadorians understand this and that they can do nothing to stop wars. They can see their whole future ahead of them but they know that it is pointless to try and change it because it just is. So they focus on what they can control which is what they spend they time viewing. They look at the peace between the wars and forget the wars ever happened. I think this is sort of what Kurt Vonnegut or Billy is trying do do with the flashbacks and forwards in his storyline. When he is in the hard times of the POW camps he escapes them in his memory by sifting and focusing on his happy memories. It is his way of ignoring the war the way the Tralfamadorians do.

The book in general

In the book there is a lot of traveling through time and it got me thinking BIlly Pilgrim's journeys through time could instead be a social commentary on Post-Traumatic Stress disorder and that Billy isn't skipping through time, and that he is slowly going insane

Chapter 8 inquiry

 In chapter 8 Howard W. Campbell, Jr., the American Nazi propagandist, speaks to the weary, malnourished prisoners at the slaughterhouse. He solicits them to join his Free American Corps to fight on the Russian front, promising food and repatriation after the war. Edgar Derby stands up and, in his finest moment, denounces Campbell. He defends the American fight for freedom and praises the brotherhood between Russians and Americans. An air-raid siren concludes the confrontation, and everyone takes shelter in a meat locker carved into the bedrock beneath the slaughterhouse. The alarm is false. The narrator states that Dresden will not be destroyed until the next night.



I wonder what made that alarm trip and cause them to go in to a mass commotion? I personally thought maybe it wasn't the best idea to go into the meat locker because the ones I have seen Are locked form the outside and cannot be opened from the inside, This makes me wonder about how it will teach us about the thought process of panicking soldiers.  

Friday, January 1, 2016

In chapter 4, Billy is unable to sleep and so he watches a war movie late on the night of his daughters wedding. When Billy describes the war movie, he tells of watching it backwards. This is a really interesting idea. Watching a war backwards you would see many hurt and killed men get back to full health and then all help to repair broken cities like Dresden. A war in reverse is the perfect anti-war idea. "The bombers opened their bomb bay doors, exerted a miraculous magnetism which shrunk the fires, gathered them into cylindrical steel containers and lifted the containers into the bellies of the planes." (74) The soldiers transform from bringers of death and destruction to men with godly healing powers. Later on in the chapter, t says that the bombs were disabled, and hidden in the ground where they would forever be hidden. I think its a really cool idea how the whole concept of war can be changed if one just watches it in reverse. This again relates to the 4th dimension of Tralfalmadore where time has no order or constraints in their life. I think this trend will continue through the whole book.

Thursday, December 31, 2015


War seems to be a place to be quite serious. It is a place for young men to be molded into soldiers without much regard to individual personality. Billy Pilgrim does not seem to fall into the typical personality for most soldiers. In chapter 8, Billy says “One of the main effects of war, after all, is that people are discouraged from being characters” (164 Vonnegut). We hear most about individuals who have character in Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five, but not so much about those who are fit to be a good soldier. In other war stories, like All Quiet On The Western Front, we hear much more about good soldiers. Ones who are fit to fight and, for the most part, successful. Billy is not built to be a soldier and It almost seems as if war doesn't change him that much because Pilgrim is very much himself throughout the story. He is a little oblivious, and I think his lack of awareness contributes to his ability to escape from the pressure to be a “cookie cutter” soldier. It did not make him a particularly good or successful soldier, but he kept his imagination. I am always curious as to where his imagination will bring us next. I wonder how different the story would be if he did conform to the desired mentality of a soldier.
Even though Slaughterhouse Five is told in a light hearted way, the main character, Billy Pilgrim, has had many traumatic experiences. Being a soldier is especially is difficult and horrific, but Billy has endured lots of incidents in and out of war. While on Tralfamadore, it seemed as if the Tralfamadorians were always peaceful. Even though they are not, they have the ability to chose with ease what point in time they want to focus on.

In chapter 5, Billy Pilgrim was given a piece of advice by the Tralfamadorians; “That’s one thing Earthlings might learn to do, if they tried hard enough: Ignore the awful times, and concentrate on the good ones” (117).

I think that Billy wants very much to implement the advice the Tralfamadorians gave him into his life but cannot completely ignore the bad times. He tells the story of terrible times as if it were not a big deal, and it seems to me that he is trying to make the bad moments seem less bad, even if he can’t forget about them, so he can feel more peaceful like the Tralfamadorians. I also think that Vonnegut put this into his story as a piece of advice for the reader. We are “earthlings” as well, so their advice is also directed at us. I wonder how difficult it would be to try and ignore the horrors of war, and if i would handle it any better than Billy Pilgrim or Vonnegut. Is ignoring the bad and pretending it didn’t happen really better than coming to terms with it and learning other ways to cope?

Saturday, December 26, 2015

In Kurt Vonnegut’s novel, Slaughterhouse Five, there is a big presence of science fiction. Living through the war and the firebombing of Dresden would have been a very traumatic experience. One that would leave the people who experienced it wishing they could have avoided it.

In chapter 5, Billy Pilgrim and Rosewater read lots of science fiction books while in the hospital. They were left hurt and mentally frazzled “so they were trying to re-invent themselves and their universe. Science fiction was a big help” (101).

The science fiction aspect of this Slaughterhouse Five seems to be Vonnegut’s attempt to reinvent himself. He is caught in between wanting to express what happened to him and his comrades while wishing he could have changed his reality. The time travel, aliens and all of the fictitious aspects of this novel is the part of Vonnegut wishing he could change his past and using science fiction as a coping method. The truthful parts of the novel is the part of Vonnegut wanting to document and share his experiences. I wonder if deceiving himself by using science fiction actually helps him cope, or if it just contributes to his stress and confusion.