Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Understanding Religion Through Kurt Vonneguts Cats Cradle Essay
Understanding Religion Through Kurt Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle       The following  is issued as a  warning from the author   Kurt Vonnegut  to the reader: "Any  one unable to understand   how  a  useful  religion  can  be  founded  on lies will not   understand  this  book  either"(14).  The  latter  quote  is   typical  of Vonnegut  in his  usage of  creating a  personal   narrative.           Kurt Vonnegut Jr. was born in Indianapolis, like many   of  his characters,  in 1922.  His life  from that  point on   closely resembles  the lives of the  people in his satirical   novel Cat's Cradle. Vonnegut's mother committed suicide when   he was  twenty two years old  and in many of  his novels the   character  of  the  mother  is  dead.  Vonnegut's  "lifelong   pessimism clearly  has its roots in  his parents' despairing   response to  the depression" (Allen  2). He was  captured in   WWII and was present in  Dresden, Germany when it was bombed   and set fire to, killing 135,000 citizens. This later became   the     basis     for     Vonnegut's     greatest    success   Slaughterhouse-Five.           Cat's  Cradle was  published in  1963, and  though it   wasn't as big a success  as Slaughterhouse, it became widely   known as contributing to the "counter-culture" since it does   in  fact  question  and  counter  almost  every  part of our   society's culture  (Reed). One of the  largest points of our   culture brought  into question in Cat's  Cradle is religion.   Vonnegut himself  is a Humanist, meaning  that he isn't sure   of the existence  of a God, but values  life above all else.   In  his  last  novel  Timequake,  Vonnegut  explains that he   understands that  humans need religion as  something to turn   to for comfort and suppo...              ... Literature). Columbia,   SC: University of SouthCarolina Press, 1991.    Broer,  Lawrence R.,  editor. Sanity  Plea: Schizophrenia in   the Novels  of Kurt Vonnegut  (revised edition). Tuscaloosa,   AL: University of Alabama Press, 1994    Huber, Chris. The Vonnegut Web. 14 Feb. 2002. 25 Feb. 2002  http://www.duke.edu/~crh4/vonnegut/    Klinkowitz,   Jerome.   Vonnegut   in   Fact:   The   Public   Spokesmanship of Personal  Fiction. Columbia, SC: University   of South Carolina Press, 1998.    Reed, Peter J. Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., Warner Books, 1972.    Vit, Marek.  Marek Vit's Kurt Vonnegut  Corner. 4 Mar. 2002.   25 Feb. 2002  http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/4953/vonn.html    Vonnegut,  Kurt  .  Cat's   Cradle.  1963.  New  York:  Dell   Publishing, 1988    Vonnegut, Kurt. Mother Night. New York: Fawcett, 1962.    Vonnegut, Kurt. Timequake. New York: Putnam, 1997                      Understanding Religion Through Kurt Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle Essay  Understanding Religion Through Kurt Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle       The following  is issued as a  warning from the author   Kurt Vonnegut  to the reader: "Any  one unable to understand   how  a  useful  religion  can  be  founded  on lies will not   understand  this  book  either"(14).  The  latter  quote  is   typical  of Vonnegut  in his  usage of  creating a  personal   narrative.           Kurt Vonnegut Jr. was born in Indianapolis, like many   of  his characters,  in 1922.  His life  from that  point on   closely resembles  the lives of the  people in his satirical   novel Cat's Cradle. Vonnegut's mother committed suicide when   he was  twenty two years old  and in many of  his novels the   character  of  the  mother  is  dead.  Vonnegut's  "lifelong   pessimism clearly  has its roots in  his parents' despairing   response to  the depression" (Allen  2). He was  captured in   WWII and was present in  Dresden, Germany when it was bombed   and set fire to, killing 135,000 citizens. This later became   the     basis     for     Vonnegut's     greatest    success   Slaughterhouse-Five.           Cat's  Cradle was  published in  1963, and  though it   wasn't as big a success  as Slaughterhouse, it became widely   known as contributing to the "counter-culture" since it does   in  fact  question  and  counter  almost  every  part of our   society's culture  (Reed). One of the  largest points of our   culture brought  into question in Cat's  Cradle is religion.   Vonnegut himself  is a Humanist, meaning  that he isn't sure   of the existence  of a God, but values  life above all else.   In  his  last  novel  Timequake,  Vonnegut  explains that he   understands that  humans need religion as  something to turn   to for comfort and suppo...              ... Literature). Columbia,   SC: University of SouthCarolina Press, 1991.    Broer,  Lawrence R.,  editor. Sanity  Plea: Schizophrenia in   the Novels  of Kurt Vonnegut  (revised edition). Tuscaloosa,   AL: University of Alabama Press, 1994    Huber, Chris. The Vonnegut Web. 14 Feb. 2002. 25 Feb. 2002  http://www.duke.edu/~crh4/vonnegut/    Klinkowitz,   Jerome.   Vonnegut   in   Fact:   The   Public   Spokesmanship of Personal  Fiction. Columbia, SC: University   of South Carolina Press, 1998.    Reed, Peter J. Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., Warner Books, 1972.    Vit, Marek.  Marek Vit's Kurt Vonnegut  Corner. 4 Mar. 2002.   25 Feb. 2002  http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/4953/vonn.html    Vonnegut,  Kurt  .  Cat's   Cradle.  1963.  New  York:  Dell   Publishing, 1988    Vonnegut, Kurt. Mother Night. New York: Fawcett, 1962.    Vonnegut, Kurt. Timequake. New York: Putnam, 1997                        
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