Saturday, August 4, 2012

Ch 10: End Post 2

As I related the first chapter to my life, I will relate the end chapter to my life.  At the end of the novel, Vonnegut goes back to Dresden with O'Hare.  I have visited the same place more than once too.  I've been to Puerto Rico twice, Strasburg twice, and will return to Spain again on Spring Break.  I go because I enjoyed the first trip and would like to return again.  Vonnegut's trip wasn't quite the same but he went back anyways and that's kind of the point.

Ch 10: End Post 1

The ending chapter's literary term is motivation.  Motivation is the reasoning behind a character's  behavior, like not dying.  Billy was a prisoner of war.  He had to do what the Germans told him or he would likely die. That's some decent motivation to do anything, including digging mines full of corpses that were soon to be torched by a flamethrower. Pleasant.

Ch 9: Random Post 2

In Chapter 9, Rumfoord tells the nurses that Billy has echolalia. Echolalia is an actual disorder that is exactly as it is described in Slaughterhouse-Five. When someone has echolalia, they repeat what they hear.  Rumfoord accuses Billy of having echolalia when he awakens in the hospital and tells Rumfoord that he was in Dresden during the bombing.

Ch 9: Random Post 1

Chapter 9, which I call "Random" because of the many, seemingly unrelated events, has a picture at the end which has an invocation in it.  It states, "God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom always to tell the difference."  This prayer is on Montana Wildhack's locket as an invocation to God to help her in her life.

Ch 8: The Bombing Post 2

At the beginning of Chapter 8, a man, Howard W. Campbell Jr., recruits American POWs for the Free American Corps., a group of Americans that became Nazis.  In real life, there was a unit of the Waffen SS that was very similar to the Free American Corps.  It was known as the British Free Corps. and it recruited British POWs to the Nazi forces.  Like the Free American Corps., not many POWs joined.  Only 59 men were recruited during its course and at its maximum there were only 27 men in it.

Ch: 8 The Bombing Post 1

The Literary Term for "The Bombing" will be "Dead Metaphor" also known as a cliche.  The cliche used in Chapter 8 is "You think money grows on trees?"  That cliche is often used when someone asks for something extra but the person is not willing to pay for the expense.  It is used to signify that one cannot simply pluck money off of a tree but has to work for the money they earn.

Friday, August 3, 2012

Ch 7: Syrup Post 2

Syrup relates to many types of the same incident: the plane crash.  Over the years several planes have crashed, killing many, like in the TV show Lost, in which Oceanic Flight 815 lost 254 of the 324 passengers.  Some remain unconscious as Billy did, but like the plane in the book, most of the people die.  Unlike the book however, the survivors of the crash were not rescued while Billy Pilgrim was rescued by ski instructors.

Ch 7: Syrup Post 1

Syrup's Literary term will be imagery.  Vonnegut uses imagery a goodly amount and I have chosen a select passage that "evokes a picture of a person," in this case people.  Vonnegut says, "The people who first got to the crash scene were young Austrian ski instructors from the famous ski resort below.  They spoke to each other in German as they went from body to body.  They wore black wind masks with two holes  for their eyes and a red topknot.  They looked like golliwogs, like white people pretending to be black for the laughs they could get,"  to describe the two people who saved him from the crash.  He could have used one sentence (like I would) but he chose to use imagery to make the scene much better.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Ch 6: Death Post 2

For Chapter 6, I will relate characters in the book to someone in real life.  That someone is Kurt Vonnegut. His first relation was to, of course, Billy Pilgrim.  When Vonnegut was in the war, he fought in the Battle of the Bulge (like Billy did,) was separated by his regiment (like Billy was,) and was soon captured by Germans (like Billy.)  Vonnegut also relates to Edgar Derby.  While he was a POW in the war, he was elected the leader of the prisoners just as Derby was.

Ch 6: Death Post 1

The Lit Term for Chapter 6: Death (Billy's death) is "foil character."  I personally think that Paul Lazzaro and Billy Pilgrim are foils.  Billy is a peaceful person. Lazzaro, not so much.  Billy wished for peace on Earth during his time on Tralfamadore while Lazzaro "put points on the ends," and "stuck 'em into a steak." He then waited while the dog ate the steak and soon "Blood started coming out of his mouth. He started crying, and he rolled on the ground, as though the knives were on the outside of him."  He did put sharp metal into a steak and fed it to a dog, so he's not quite the nicest guy you'll meet.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Ch 5: Prison Post 2

In Chapter 5 of Slaughterhouse-Five, Billy and his wife go on a honeymoon.  This practically relates to just about every married couple ever.  Most married couples have a honeymoon. Couples take trips out of town to spend time with each other.

Ch 5: Prison Post 1

For Chapter 5, Prison, the literary term I will use is dialect.  Dialect is a way of speaking that is common to a specific area. For example, the Englishmen say, "You're on fire, lad," "What have they done to you, lad," and "What became of your boots, lad?"  The repeated use of the word lad is to specify that they are English.

Monday, July 23, 2012

Ch 4: Stolen Post 2

In Slaughterhouse-five, Billy Pilgrim is abducted by Tralfamadorians, an alien race.  This relates to a couple named Betty and Barney Hill.  The couple were the first people to get much media attention for claiming to be abducted by aliens.  They claimed to be abducted on Sept. 19-20, 1961, eight years before the book was written.

Ch 4: Stolen Post 1

Alright, I think it's time that I finally use this vocab word for the book (it had to come up at some point.)  The word is motif and what it describes is "So it goes."  Vonnegut uses "So it goes." as a recurring phrase every time someone dies because they still live on in the moments in the past; it's just at this moment that they are dead. So it goes.

Ch 3: The Capture Post 2

For this chapter, I'm going to relate the book to history. More specifically, German WWII history.  In the book, Billy Pilgrim is transported, via train, into Germany.  This is historically accurate.  Germans transported captured soldiers, Christians, Jews, gypsies, etc. into Germany by packing them into boxcars.  People died in these boxcars just as they died in the book too.

Ch 3: The Capture Post 1

For Chapter 3, the vocabulary word I will choose is "situational irony."  This fits the beginning of the chapter perfectly.  In Chapter 2, Billy, Roland, and the two scouts were being chased by German soldiers with dogs.   They were, but the ironic part was that the dog "was shivering. Her tail was between her legs."  Also, "Two of the Germans were boys in their early teens. Two were ramshackle old men... Their commander was a middle-aged corporal- red-eyed, scrawny, tough as dried beef, sick of war."  They were misfits just like Billy's group, although we were expected to believe that they were real soldiers.

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Ch 2: So It Goes Post 2

I'm probably not the only one to pick up on this, but I probably am the only one that will post about it. I just hope I don't get in trouble. So it goes.

Roland Weary carries condoms with him.  Yes, I will connect this to our world today.  Mr. Weary carries condoms "For the Prevention of Disease Only!" Basically, he carries them as a "just in case" kind of thing.  This connects to culture in general because guys do this. They might carry one in case they find themselves in a situation requiring one. Obviously I don't, but other guys might. So it goes.

Ch 2: So It Goes Post 1

Billy Pilgrim. What a guy. Billy is the protagonist of the story, but that's not the literary term I'm going to use. Billy, he's an antihero. Vonnegut describes him as "tall and weak, and shaped like a bottle of Coca-Cola . . . He looked like a filthy flamingo." Obviously, he doesn't sound very hero like.  Heroes aren't shaped like Coca-Cola. So it goes.

Friday, July 6, 2012

Ch 1: The Vonnegut Preface Post 2

My second post here about the Vonnegut Preface will be about the same thing as the first: Vonnegut talking to his dog.  This kind of thing happens all the time. I would say that most people talk to their pets. My grandma talks to my cat all the time. Vonnegut talking to Sandy is an everyday, ordinary thing for most people.

Ch1: The Vonnegut Preface Post 1

For Chapter 1, which I like to call "The Vonnegut Preface" because it doesn't seem that much like part of the story, the literary term I chose was anthropomorphism. Anthropomorphism is seen when Vonnegut says, "And I let the dog out, or I let him in, and we talk some." Vonnegut and his dog talk because dogs can do that. Honestly, the purpose this quote seems to have is to prove that Vonnegut is a normal person.  It's just the first chapter so I can't go too deep on this but that is what the quote seems to do.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012