Saturday, October 12, 2019
The Parallel Plot Lines in Slaughterhouse-Five :: Slaughterhouse-Five Essays
The Parallel Plot Lines in Slaughterhouse-Five            Kurt Vonnegut is and will always  in my eyes and in the eyes  of many others the writer who made the science-fiction genre safe  for  not only  mainstream appeal,  but also  critical acclaim and  intellectual contemplation. Even though  Arthur C. Clarke's 2001:  A Space  Odyssey  and  Douglas   Adams'  Hitchhiker  series  were  released  in  roughly  the  same  timeframe  as  Kurt  Vonnegut's  Slaughterhouse-Five, none  has held the same  aura of respect and  significance to  the literary zeitgeist  as Vonnegut's monumental  masterpiece.  The  respect  Slaughterhouse-Five  garnishes  among  bookworms and  the intellectual elite alike  is no accident. Kurt  Vonnegut's universal acclaim and appeal  surely comes in no small  part from his gift for connecting, almost unnoticiably, seemingly  unrelated  objects  and  events  to  give  them  deeper  meaning,  creating   a   phenomenon   known   within   Jungian  circles  as  synchronicity. By  making his novel  so multi-layered by  drawing  these comparisons, such as in  being transported from a train car  into a POW  camp to an extraterrestrial spaceship  that hums like  a melodious owl, human beings being trapped within each moment in  time like an insect in amber,  and the writer's own repetition of  his  current project  to a  jokey old  song, the  writer gives us  a deeper  insight into  the real  multi-layeredness of  space and  time.         When Billy  Pilgrim and his fellow  POWs are transported out  of their train car and toward the POW camp, Vonnegut compares the  calm  peeking-in  and  speech  of  the  Axis  power guards to the  behavior of  an owl. The  owl had been  mentioned earlier in  the  novel,  more specifically  in the  persona of  a clock hanging in  Billy's office, and is brought  up again here to describe Billy's  antagonists: "The  guards peeked in  Billy's car owlishly,  cooed  calmingly." By  using the owl  already mentioned in  the novel as  a metaphor, Vonnegut  makes an otherwise  uncomfortable and tense  situation  more familiar.  The  writer  uses this  metaphor again  while telling  of the movement of  the POWs out of  the train car    					    
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