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Slaughterhous e V -1 Why Write?

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Page 1: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Slaughterhouse V -1Why Write?

Page 2: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I:

Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views of Life – So it goes

Page 3: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Kurt Vonnegut (1922 - ) The “author” in SH-V. Joined WWII, became a prisoner of war during

the Battle of the Bulge (the last offensive on Germany’s part) on December 14, 1944, and sent to Dresden.

Studied anthropology in the University of Chicago, but his thesis was rejected.

Became a writer since, published Slaughterhouse-Five in 1968 (the peak of anti-war movement), which made him successful and a guru figure in post-60’s literary field.

Page 4: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Slaughterhouse-Five--BackgroundDresden Bombing:

Dresden -- "Florence on the Elbe" February 13 & 14, 1945; estimated deaths: 130,000 to 250,000, almost all of them

civilians. Part of a massive attack coded as “Thunderclap,” which

targeted the German cities of Berlin, Dresden, Leipzig, and Chemnitz.

Irony: Dresden is not a strategic point (no factories, no railways, bridges, etc, but a lot POW’s) meaninglessness

Page 5: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Slaughterhouse-Five--PlotTime Traveling -- Four segments of Billy Pilgrim’s 1922 - his childhood, 1944 - his World War II years, 1968 - his postwar life as a family man and

optometrist in New York, his capture by aliens who come from the

planet Tralfamadore

Page 6: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Starting Questions Why does the author discuss ‘how’ he gets

to write this novel? What views of the war, history and life does

he introduces here?

Page 7: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Chapter I – the “Frame” of the Story

the author in the novel Makes claim to “reality” – p. 1 Discusses

his inability to write; How the novel is prepared for; Dresden in context

Page 8: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Why writeFor writing:

Dresden, worse than Hiroshima, but not much publicity p. 10;

Obsessed (as “telephoners”, but his memory useless – p. 13-14 repetitions as nonsense or false starts (or rhymes p. 7; of names p. 4; “so it goes”)

Against writing: anti-war being anti-glacier, or anti-death 3-4 O’Hare’s wife: books encouraging wars 15 Lot’s wife looking back

Page 9: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Preparation: Exposing the Frames 1. the title decided, Children’s Crusade 15

and research arranging climax and plots p. 5; to the publisher 19 —nothing intelligent to

say about a massacre

Page 10: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Historical Perspectives: Children’s Crusade --sold as slaves; p.16 The seige of Dresden in 1760 History is not progressive; Is it linear?

Page 11: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Life as a Dark comedy

Self-Belittling: the author’s life after the war //Yon Yonson 2-3, 7, 11 (//Billy Pilgrim)

Life’s transience -- “So it Goes” as a reporter 9 -“So it goes.” News media’s

indifference (later) airplane crash, and the wife’s car accident

25)lice, champaign 84; 73

“if the accident will.” p. 2

Page 12: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Life as Presented by Commercial Culture

P. 18 World’s Fair in NY; Three Musketeers candy bar

More next time

Page 13: Slaughterhouse V -1 Why Write?. Outline General Introduction Starting Questions on Chapter 1 Chapter I: Frames Why Write – the author in the text Views

Characters (mentioned so far) Views of people – no difference? P. 8

Bernard V. O'Hare Edgar Derby Roland Weary Paul Lazarro