Black Humour in Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughter house-Five
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Department of English
Abstract
Slaughterhouse-Fivedepictsblack humorwithinthe fragmented structure of
the novel covering the draconic act of fire bombing of Dresden in Second World War.
Throughout the novel, the central character, Billy Pilgrim travels back and forth to all
the dimensions of time, and he has been aptly termed as a 'time traveler but it is
absurd that he cannot control where or when he will travel to.Moreover, in 1945,
allied firebombing of Dresden killed more than 135,000 civilians, ironically, the
climax occursnot with the bombing of Dresden but with the execution of an
American foot soldier(Edgar Derby) who committed a petty theft of teapot.Amidst
all of the horror, death and destruction, so much time isspenton the punishment of
one man.Itbecomes blackhumour thatmakes the reader feel a sense of unease and
powerless.