Why should you read Kurt Vonnegut Mia Nacamulli

Billy Pilgrim can’t sleep

because he knows aliens will arrive
to abduct him in one hour.

He knows the aliens are coming because
he has become “unstuck” in time,

causing him to experience
events out of chronological order.

Over the course of Kurt Vonnegut’s
Slaughterhouse-five,

he hops back and forth between a childhood
trip to the Grand Canyon,

his life as a middle-aged optometrist,

his captivity in an intergalactic zoo,

the humiliations he endured
as a war prisoner, and more.

The title of Slaughterhouse-five and
much of its source material

came from Vonnegut’s own
experiences in World War II.

As a prisoner of war, he lived in a former
slaughterhouse in Dresden,

where he took refuge in an
underground meat locker

while Allied forces bombed the city.

When he and the other prisoners
finally emerged,

they found Dresden utterly demolished.

After the war, Vonnegut tried to
make sense of human behavior

by studying an unusual
aspect of anthropology:

the shapes of stories,

which he insisted were just as interesting
as the shapes of pots or spearheads.

To find the shape, he graphed the main
character’s fortune

from the beginning to the end of a story.

The zany curves he generated revealed
common types of fairy tales and myths

that echo through many cultures.

But this shape can be
the most interesting of all.

In a story like this,

it’s impossible to distinguish the
character’s good fortune from the bad.

Vonnegut thought this kind of story
was the truest to real life,

in which we are all the victims
of a series of accidents,

unable to predict how events
will impact us long term.

He found the tidy, satisfying arcs of
many stories at odds with this reality,

and he set out to explore the ambiguity

between good and bad fortune
in his own work.

When Vonnegut ditched clear-cut fortunes,

he also abandoned
straightforward chronology.

Instead of proceeding tidily from
beginning to end, in his stories

“All moments, past, present and future
always have existed, always will exist.”

Tralfamadorians, the aliens who crop up
in many of his books,

see all moments at once.

They “can see where each star has been
and where it is going,

so that the heavens are filled
with rarefied, luminous spaghetti.”

But although they can see all of time,

they don’t try to change
the course of events.

While the Trafalmadorians may be at peace
with their lack of agency,

Vonnegut’s human characters are
still getting used to it.

In The Sirens of Titan,

when they seek the meaning of life
in the vastness of the universe,

they find nothing but “empty heroics,
low comedy, and pointless death.”

Then, from their vantage point within
a “chrono-synclastic infundibulum,”

a man and his dog see devastating
futures for their earthly counterparts,

but can’t change the course of events.

Though there aren’t easy answers
available, they eventually conclude

that the purpose of life is “to love
whoever is around to be loved.”

In Cat’s Cradle, Vonnegut’s characters
turn to a different source of meaning:

Bokonism,

a religion based on harmless lies
that all its adherents recognize as lies.

Though they’re aware of Bokonism’s lies,

they live their lives by
these tenets anyway,

and in so doing develop
some genuine hope.

They join together in groups called
Karasses, which consist of people we

“find by accident but […]
stick with by choice”—

cosmically linked around
a shared purpose.

These are not to be confused
with Granfalloons,

groups of people who appoint significance
to actually meaningless associations,

like where you grew up, political
parties, and even entire nations.

Though he held a bleak view of the human
condition, Vonnegut believed strongly that

“we are all here to help each other get
through this thing, whatever it is."

We might get pooped and demoralized,

but Vonnegut interspersed
his grim assessments

with more than a few morsels of hope.

His fictional alter ego, Kilgore Trout,
supplied this parable:

two yeast sat “discussing the
possible purposes of life

as they ate sugar and suffocated
in their own excrement.

Because of their limited intelligence,

they never came close to guessing
that they were making champagne.”

In spite of his insistence that we’re
all here to fart around,

in spite of his deep concerns about
the course of human existence,

Vonnegut also advanced the possibility,
however slim,

that we might end up
making something good.

And if that isn’t nice, what is?

比利·皮尔格里姆无法入睡,

因为他知道外星人会
在一小时内绑架他。

他知道外星人要来了,因为
他在时间上变得“脱节”,

导致他经历的
事件不按时间顺序排列。

在库尔特·冯内古特的《
五号屠宰场》中,

他在童年
的大峡谷之旅、

中年验光师的生活、

被囚禁在星际动物园、作为战俘

所忍受的屈辱
和 更多的。

五号屠宰场的名称
及其大部分原始资料

都来自冯内古特自己
在二战中的经历。

作为战俘,他住
在德累斯顿的一个前屠宰场里,

当盟军轰炸这座城市时,他躲在一个
地下肉类储物柜里

当他和其他囚犯
终于出现时,

他们发现德累斯顿被彻底摧毁了。

战后,冯内古特试图

通过研究人类学的一个不同寻常的
方面来理解人类行为:

故事的形状

,他坚持认为故事
的形状与罐子或矛头的形状一样有趣。

为了找到形状,他绘制了主角

从故事开始到结尾的命运。

他生成的滑稽曲线揭示了

在许多文化中回响的常见童话故事和神话类型。

但这种形状可能
是最有趣的。

在这样的故事中

,无法
区分角色的好坏。

冯内古特认为这种故事
是最真实的生活

,我们都是
一系列事故的受害者,

无法预测事件
将如何长期影响我们。

他发现许多故事的整齐、令人满意的弧线
与这个现实不一致

,他开始在自己的作品中探索

好运和坏运之间的模糊性

当冯内古特放弃明确的命运时,

他也放弃了
简单的年表。

在他的故事中,没有从头到尾井井有条地进行,

“所有时刻,过去、现在和未来
一直存在,永远存在。”

Tralfamadorians,在他的许多书中出现的外星人,

一次看到所有时刻。

他们“可以看到每颗星星去过
哪里以及要去哪里,

因此天堂充满
了稀薄的发光意大利面。”

但是,尽管他们可以看到所有时间,

但他们不会试图改变
事件的进程。

虽然特拉法马多尔人可能
对他们缺乏代理感到平静,但

冯内古特的人类角色
仍在习惯它。

在《泰坦的海妖》中,

当他们
在浩瀚的宇宙中

寻找生命的意义时,他们发现的只有“空洞的英雄主义、低俗的
喜剧、毫无意义的死亡”。

然后,从他们
在“时间同步漏斗”中

的有利位置,一个人和他的狗看到
了他们地球上的同伴毁灭性的未来,

但无法改变事件的进程。

尽管没有简单的
答案,但他们最终得出的

结论是,生活的目的是“爱
身边被爱的人”。

在猫的摇篮中,冯内古特的角色
转向了不同的意义来源:

博科尼主义,

一种基于无害谎言的宗教
,所有信徒都认为这是谎言。

尽管他们知道 Bokonism 的谎言,

但他们
还是按照这些原则过着

自己的生活,并由此产生了
一些真正的希望。

他们加入了一个叫做 Karasses 的团体
,这些团体由我们

“偶然发现但 […]
选择坚持”的人组成——

围绕一个共同的目标在宇宙中联系在一起

不要将这些
与 Granfalloons 混淆,这些


对实际上毫无意义的协会赋予意义,

比如你长大的地方、
政党,甚至整个国家。

尽管他对人类状况持悲观态度,但
冯内古特坚信

“我们都在这里帮助彼此
度过难关,不管它是什么。”

我们可能会大便和士气低落,

但冯内古特在
他严峻的评估中

穿插了不止 几口希望。

他虚构的另一个自我,基尔戈·特劳特,
提供了这个寓言:

两个酵母坐着“讨论
生命的可能目的,

因为它们吃糖并
在自己的粪便中窒息。

由于他们的智力有限,

他们从未接近过
猜他们在酿造香槟。”

尽管他坚持我们
都来这里是为了放屁

,尽管他
对人类存在的进程深表担忧

,但冯内古特也提出了一种可能性,
无论多么渺茫

,我们最终可能会
做出一些好的事情

。如果那是 ‘不好,是什么?