Sunday, June 17, 2012
Ch.1 (entry #2)
Throughout the first chapter Vonnegut says that he forgets many details and stories from his time as a "resident" of Slaughter House Five. Now I may just be spit balling here, but I think that Vonnegut would have wanted and tried to forget those awful events he witnessed. Which if I am correct, and not just rambling on about nothing, is quite ironic considering that he desperately wants to remember the event he doesn't want in his mind. This situation is similar to how people shut out memories and emotions that evoke unwanted thoughts or feelings. One memory that I have that I would like to get out of my mind was the time when someone broke into my friends house, when only me and my friend were home. I can honestly say that I have never been so scared in my entire life. I would love to forget that memory just how Vonnegut forgot some of his time in the Slaughter House. I don't know how you can forget memories as a war prisoner, but I am going to go with my gut feeling that he wanted to forget.
Thursday, June 7, 2012
Ch.1 (entry #1)
"The irony is so great. A whole city gets burned down and thousands and thousands of people are killed. And this American foot soldier is arrested in the ruins for taking a teapot. And he is given a regular trial, and then he's shot by a firing squad" (Vonnegut 4). Kurt Vonnegut was talking to his friend Bernard V. O'Hare, and Vonnegut was thinking of using the execution of Edgar Derby for taking a teapot. Vonnegut is correct that there is irony in that after thousands of people were killed, a man was shot for taking a teapot. However the quote above is an example of situational irony. There is situational irony in the fact that the death of one man would be the climax, and the bombing/deaths of thousands of people would not be. It really just doesn't make sense if you think about. It would be expected that the bombing of the citizens of Dresden would be the climax, but Vonnegut was serious about making the climax about the death of one man. I believe that Vonnegut did include this tid bit of information from his life as a source of comedy to make the readers laugh. I can personally say that this quote made me laugh after I reread it a few times.
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