Wednesday, May 8, 2013

My Slaughterhouse

 When you hear Postmodernism, what's the first thing that comes to your mind? Postmodernism is a really cool and interesting literary style of writing.  I think that postmodernism can be anything that breaks the rule of the old style of writing or it can have random scenes that don't relate to one another. In other words, a story that has no order of sequence and jumps around to different time or situations.  Slaughter House 5 was a great example of what I'm talking about right now. 

In the story of Slaughter House 5 by Kurt Vonnegut a man named Billy that is imprisoned by the Germans during WWII and at one point in the book, Kurt is talking about how Billy is in this prison and then next thing you know he's talking about Billy during his childhood. This is an example of how the author uses Postmodernism in this book by not following the rules and putting the story in random orders. 

Another example of why Slaughter House 5 is a Postmodernist story is when the author would humor a situation by saying "So it goes" after something bad would happen to someone.  This is another example of how this story is a postmodernism story. Instead of being heartfelt about a tragic moment that just happened, he breaks the rules and makes the situation funny or joyful. 

And this is why Slaughter House 5 is a great example of a Postmodernist novel. It shows how to break the rules by not writing in order and how he uses irony by saying "So it goes" whenever something bad happens and he decides to humor the situation. 

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