Literary Analysis
Friday, August 3, 2012
Chapter 10 - More Dignity
The the last chapter of the novel, Vonnegut's theme of dignity again arises. He explains that thousands of people are born each day and "supposes all want dignity." Just as many people die each day which puts dignity at a high price. Billy Pilgrim must go to a completely different planet to achieve the dignity he longs for because there may not be enough to go around on Earth. He had little dignity in his early years and it was completely stripped of him when he became a prisoner of war. Vonnegut wonders if there will ever be enough dignity to go around. His point in making dignity an important point in the novel is to get people to understand that we are all born will dignity but must learn to harness it so we can feel it for ourselves.
Chapter 9 - The End of the War
As the novel nears its end, Billy Pilgrim is struck with conflicting emotions. The day after the German's surrender, he is lying happily in a tomb on wheels. The coffin shaped wagon stands a symbol for both the dead and the suffering of those who survived. It also stands for the loss of innocence suffered by the "babies" in this Children's Crusade. Billy now begins to suffer the loss and despair caused by the Americans' victory. This should be the happiest moment of his life, yet he weeps for this loss of innocence. After being scolded by the German couple for the condition of the horses, Billy bursts into tears. "He hadn't cried about anything else in the war." He is crying as he realizes the defeat that victory brings. It causes him despair for the loss of lives, innocence, and the burden of his memories he will carry with him throughout his life.
Chapter 9 - Epigraph
The cattle are lowing,
The Baby awakes.
But the little Lord Jesus
No crying he makes.
Vonnegut explains that the epigraph for this book is the quatrain from this famous Christmas Carol. "Billy cried very little, though he often saw things worth crying about, and in that respect, at least, he resembled the Christ of the carol." Vonnegut has tried to make the reader view Billy with sympathy in an attempt to make him resemble Christ. Billy is also compared to Christ in the way that he has tried to spread his message about time although his journey had left him ridiculed. Through his ridicule and suffering, it seems that Billy is made stronger. In the end, he agrees that the destruction of Dresden was for the best. This reminded me of how Christ had to die on the cross in order for salvation to be possible.Thursday, August 2, 2012
Chapter 8 - The Barbershop Quartet
Billy first mentions the barbershop quartet as among the dead during the plane crash. They come up again in chapter eight and perform at Billy and Valencia's eighteenth wedding anniversary. The song they performed began to upset Billy. The song upset him so much that the others present thought he might be having a heart attack due to his facial expressions and actions. When asked by Kilgore Trout if he had seen the past or future, he simply responded "no." I find this interesting after reading it the second time because the root cause did seem to be a result of what he had experienced in the past. Therefore, he must have been upset from the incident being stored in his subconscious since he did not fully understand the root cause himself. When Billy traveled in time later in the chapter, he was back in Dresden , post bombing. Four guards were standing together "experimenting with one expression and then another." This statement is reminiscent of the barbershop quartet when described by Vonnegut as making the quartet slow, "agonized experiments with chords." Billy thought the guards looked like a barbershop quartet and imagined them singing the same words that had made him so upset the night of his anniversary. The root cause of Billy's distress during the party is now revealed - the barbershop quartet brought back the painful memories of being in Dresden when it was bombed.
Chapter 8 - Dynamic Character
Vonnegut mentioned Edgar Derby multiple times during the novel. It was implied that he would become more important later in the novel since the matter of his death was also constantly mentioned. The reader is left to ponder his later actions that lead to his eventual death. Edgar Derby can be classified as a dynamic character because he had undergone important changes that affected the result of the story's action. "Poor old Derby, the doomed high school teacher, lumbered to his feet for what was probably the finest moment in his life." He was standing up to speak out against Campbell, an American who had become a Nazi, trying to recruit soldiers for his military unit called "The Free American Corps." He told Campbell that he was "lower than a snake or a rat - or even a blood-filled tick." Vonnegut says there are almost no characters in his story because "most people in it are so sick and so much the listless playthings of enormous forces." Derby, however, was a character because he took on these enormous forces, standing up for his morals, values, and the United States. Vonnegut adds this dynamic character to give credit to the true heroes in war. He has been sure to make his anti-war stance clear throughout the novel, but also wants to point out the men who deserve to be praised because of their heroic actions.
Chapter 7 - The Life Sustaining Syrup

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