Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Death and Time in Slaughterhouse-Five Essay -- Slaughterhouse-Five Ess
Death and Time in Slaughterhouse-Five             We all wish we could  travel through time, going back to correct our stupid mistakes or zooming ahead  to see the future. In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Slaughterhouse-Five, however, time  travel does not seem so helpful. Billy Pilgrim, Vonnegut's main character, has  come unstuck in time. He bounces back and forth between his past, present, and  future lives in a roller coaster time trip that proves both senseless and  numbing. Examining Billy's time traveling, his life on Tralfamadore, and the  novel's schizophrenic structure shows that time travel is actually a metaphor  for our human tendency to avoid facing the unpleasant reality of death.                Because he cannot control time travel, Billy is forced to  relive again and again some of the most painful parts of his life. For example,  Edgar Derby, his wartime father-figure, is senselessly executed by the Germans  for stealing a teapot, while Valencia Pilgrim, his own wife, dies accidentally  from carbon monoxide poisoning after her car's exhaust system is damaged in an  accident. Barbara Greeley has observed that the effect of having to witness  these events over and over is that "Billy becomes emotionally desensitized to  human suffering and death, and is thus robbed of compassion" (3). Her point is  well taken, for without this human emotion Billy is reduced to the level of an  unfeeling machine. On the planet Tralfamadore where Billy is taken after he is  kidnapped by extraterrestrials, his machine-like response to suffering and death  grows only worse.            Like Billy, the Tralfamadorians have no sense of chronological order; they  see time as an earthling might "see a stretch of the  Rocky Mountains"  (85-86), with...              ...ound by time, which includes the ultimate reality of death.  Although death limits us by limiting our experiences, our lives are made  more  meaningful precisely because they are so short. Unlike  Tralfamadorians, who cannot change history, we can look back in time  and  learn from the mistakes of the past. Only in this sense can we truly be time  travelers: that we reflect on the past and  incorporate its lessons into  our present lives so that the future will be more productive.           Sources     Greeley, Barbara. "New Insights into Vonnegut's Thinking: Slaughterhouse-Five  and The Sirens of Titan." Psychology Today  June 1990: 1+.     Marten, Stephen Edward. "Why We Read Vonnegut Today." Twentieth Century  Interpretations of Kurt Vonnegut. Ed Russell Baker. New York: Norton, 1988.  8-25.     Vonnegut, Kurt. Slaughterhouse-Five. New York: Dell Publishing,  1988.                      
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