The Meaning of Slaughterhouse-Five, 50 Years Later

Guest Post by James Parker

There are novels so potent, and so perfected in their singularity, that they have the unexpected side effect of permanently knocking out the novelist: Nothing produced afterward comes close. Had Russell Hoban written no books before Riddley Walker, and no books after it, his reputation today would be exactly the same. Should William S. Burroughs, post–Naked Lunch, or Joseph Heller, with the last line of Catch-22 on the page (“The knife came down, missing him by inches, and he took off.”), have tossed their typewriters out of the window? Probably. And Kurt Vonnegut, at the age of 46, with Mother Night and God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater (those twin magnificences) under his belt, was projected into a state of creative culmination/exhaustion by Slaughterhouse-Five.

“I suppose that flowers, when they’re through blooming, have some sort of awareness of some purpose having been served,” he mused horticulturally to a Playboy interviewer in 1973. “Flowers didn’t ask to be flowers and I didn’t ask to be me. At the end of Slaughterhouse-Five, I had the feeling that I had produced this blossom. So I had a shutting-off feeling, you know, that I had done what I was supposed to do and everything was OK. And that was the end of it.”

Fifty years have passed since the publication of Slaughterhouse-Five. It’s the same age as me. And the older I get, and the more lumps fall off my brain, the more I find that rereading is the thing. Build your own little cockeyed canon and then bear down on it; get to know it, forward and backward; get to know it well. So I don’t know how many times I’ve read Slaughterhouse-Five. Three? Four? It never gets old, is the point. It never wanes in energy. This book is in no way the blossom of a flower. Slaughterhouse-Five is more in the nature of a superpower that the mutant author had to teach himself to master—and then could use, at full strength, only once.

The self-training took decades. The mutating event was, as always, brief. Between February 13 and February 15, 1945, Allied bombers dropped nearly four thousand tons of high explosives and incendiaries on the historic German city of Dresden. The effect was elemental: Air became fire. Vonnegut, an American prisoner of war, was there—but 60 feet underground. Captured during the Battle of the Bulge, conveyed to Dresden by boxcar, and billeted in a derelict slaughterhouse as the bombs fell, he was sheltering with some fellow POWs and a couple of dazed German guards in a basement meat locker. They emerged to rubble, ash, twisted metal, death. Somewhere between 18,000 and 25,000 people (we still don’t know) had been killed.

The innumerability and anonymity of this mass death was in contrast to the one very unique and countable corpse that Vonnegut already had in his life—that of his mother, who had died by suicide less than a year before. How did this bereaved and half-starved young man, stepping out into the necropolis of Dresden, manage not to lose his mind? Native resilience, or ontological elasticity, or something else again—his writerly atman maybe, the eternal indestructible essence that blinked its turtle eyes behind all his ironies and observations.

It took him, anyway, 25 years to figure out what to do. There’s a haunting sentence in Charles J. Shields’s Vonnegut biography, And So It Goes: “How to write about a tremendous event of war that he had been there for, and yet had not been there for, because he was suspended underground?” There but not there, midair but buried—suspended underground. This is the limbo zone of Wilfred Owen’s 1918 poem “Strange Meeting,” the behind-the-trenches half-world that the poet enters in a dream or in death: “It seemed that out of battle I escaped / Down some profound dull tunnel, long since scooped.” In the end Vonnegut had no choice. To get out of the tunnel, he had to write a book about the impossibility of writing a book about Dresden. About the impossibility of even holding a continuous idea of Dresden in your head.

And so, Slaughterhouse-Five, with its jump cuts and freeze-frames, its collapsing facades and self-replacing scenery, its chronological slapstick. It begins with a false start; Chapter 1 is all about how long it took Vonnegut to write the book, a kind of high-wire throat clearing. With Chapter 2, the story begins, except that the story is all over the place. “Listen: Billy Pilgrim has come unstuck in time. Billy has gone to sleep a senile widower and awakened on his wedding day. He has walked through a door in 1955 and come out another one in 1941. He has gone back through that door to find himself in 1963.” Billy Pilgrim is an American soldier who was captured and taken to Dresden. It’s become a critical commonplace to point out that these time hops and abrupt dissociations are symptoms of PTSD.

Rereading Slaughterhouse-Five now that we’re both 50, I became absorbed, in a new way, by the shifting voltage of the phrase So it goes, which appears in the text (just googled this) 106 times—as a tic, then a sigh, then a valediction, then a disconnection, then a blessing, then a fatalistic fuck you, then a tic again. I was struck afresh by the folktale quality of Vonnegut’s narration and its particular synthesis of American deadpan and skull-like Eastern European laughter. “Somewhere the big dog barked again. With the help of fear and echoes and winter silences, that dog had a voice like a big bronze gong.” And I got an especially rarefied buzz, this time, off his Trickster-ish audacity: a kind of euphoria of shredded conventions, exploded genres.

“Reality was giving its lesson,” the poet Ted Hughes wrote in Crow, “its mish-mash of Scripture and physics.” For Vonnegut, the lesson is more of a mishmash of pulp sci-fi and the gravedigger scene in Hamlet. Billy Pilgrim reads a book by his favorite author, the deeply unsuccessful, prophetically high-concept Kilgore Trout; in this unnamed novel, a time traveler visits the scene of the Crucifixion. With a stethoscope. He wants to find out whether Jesus really died. “The time-traveler was the first one up the ladder … and he leaned close to Jesus so people couldn’t see him use the stethoscope, and he listened. There wasn’t a sound inside the emaciated chest cavity. The Son of God was as dead as a doornail.” (Next line: “So it goes.”)

I appreciate, more than ever, the exultant brokenness of this text. The theologian Paul Tillich once preached a sermon about Saint Paul, specifically about the difficult position Paul was in after getting celestially dislodged from his horse on the road to Damascus. Paul was in psychological pieces at this point, says Tillich. Shattered. But crucially, he didn’t try and pull himself together. Instead he “dwelt with the pieces.” He allowed the pieces to be themselves, and the divine light to shine between them. And that’s what I’ll say about Vonnegut, and the courage and mastery of his art in Slaughterhouse-Five: For this one time, completely, he dwelt with the pieces.

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13 Comments
Hollywood Rob
Hollywood Rob
April 5, 2019 1:29 pm

There are people who see everything as mystical and there are people who see everything as real. I suspect that our chronicler is the former.

BB
BB
  Hollywood Rob
April 5, 2019 1:54 pm

Meatballs ,as bad as the bombing of Dresden was the bombing of Japan was worse. Air Force General Lemay said if he would have lost the war he would have been charged as a war criminal . Lemay also said the only reason he stop the bombing is He ran out of bombs. 80,000 die in one night of bombing . Most burned to death.
Meatballs , would you have the will to kill that many people in one night.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
April 5, 2019 2:06 pm

Definitely makes the cut as one of the top ten American novels.

I didn’t really get what the author meant when he wrote the title because it never really explores that in the rest of the essay.

And so it goes…

DRUD
DRUD
  Hardscrabble Farmer
April 5, 2019 3:22 pm

I know it’s just me, but as great as Slaughterhouse Five is, it’s not even in Vonnegut’s top five, yet still definitely in the top 100 American Novels.

For me I prefer (in no particular order, that’s too hard):

Cat’s Cradle
Mother Night
Galapagos
The Sirens of Titan
Bluebeard

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
  Hardscrabble Farmer
April 8, 2019 11:48 pm

Wasn’t Slaughterhouse-5 the number of the building he hid in the basement of during the Dresden firebombing? Schlachthof-funf?
Not sure if there’s meaning deeper than that.

miforest
miforest
April 5, 2019 3:25 pm

the actual death toll has been propagandized down since the book was published . the city was swollen with 500000 – 600000 refugees at that time . likely death toll was over 100K

Capn Mike
Capn Mike
April 5, 2019 4:04 pm

Reminiscing about S-5 is like stepping into the chronosynclastic infundibulum.
What a great novel!

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
April 5, 2019 4:33 pm

That was fairly incredible, I think…

“Paul was in psychological pieces at this point, says Tillich.”

This bears further exploration. Paul was wreaking havoc upon a small group of His Jewish brethren in the name of his god. He KNEW he was doing gods work!

Acts 9:1-2 KJB… “And Saul, yet breathing out threatenings and slaughter against the disciples of the Lord, went unto the high priest, And desired of him letters to Damascus to the synagogues, that if he found any of this way, whether they were men or women, he might bring them bound unto Jerusalem.”

These heretics needed to die. His religion such a viscous motivation. And what happens?

Acts 9:3-4 KJB… “And as he journeyed, he came near Damascus: and suddenly there shined round about him a light from heaven: And he fell to the earth, and heard a voice saying unto him, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?”

Later in Acts Paul testifies that the light was brighter then the noonday sun! It literally floored him; and then it spoke a question Saul had to reconcile.

Acts 9:5 KJB… “And he said, Who art thou, Lord? And the Lord said, I am Jesus whom thou persecutest: it is hard for thee to kick against the pricks.”

The voice spoke in such a way that Saul KNEW it was God Himself speaking. “Who art thou Lord?” Sauls question speaks VOLUMES… he asks the Lord; “who art thou?” That my TBP friends is the question indeed. Who is Lord? I can imagine Saul thinking to himself before the voice answers… “please, oh please, don’t let it be Jesus!!!”

And the voice answers… “I am Jesus.”

Saul, soon to be Paul watches as the entire foundation of his reality crumbles before him. He will never be the same again. Amen and amen.

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
April 5, 2019 9:21 pm

I agree, and Slaughterhouse Five is beyond belief in its horror, but Cat’s Cradle is Vonnegut’s greatest novel…

DD
DD
April 6, 2019 7:32 am

I recently came upon the box of papers and documents containing many letters and documents pertaining to my father’s time as a POW in Japan, deceased almost five years now.

In that box is a xerox copy of a handwritten letter with a handdrawn map of a prison camp where a US marine named Newton was held for more than six months in an underground room in the hills between Zentsuji and with no light except from the occasional candle he was given to read his Bible for a few minutes each day. It tells the story of his survival and rescue by a team of Allied troops led to find him by a giant of man in the Australian Navy sent to get Zentsuji POWs. Upon discovering one of the men, Red Newton, had been sent to a dungeon for stealing sugar, he commandeered vehicles from the Japanese locals and drove to the prison gates and demanded to be let in to get the American.

It makes me tear up to even think about it so I doubt I can even read it again. I met and loved some of those old POWs. I called a few of them Uncle.

The copy of the letter will be in a box heading east if anyone thinks they might want to read it during a lull in barbeque/picnic preparation or festivities to see what a man does to keep himself alive in a hole, alone in the dark. It also has its profound moments in addition to some rather countrified detail.

The man speaks of a day so dark he yelled at the guards so that they might come and beat him to death he was so miserable. He says that he literally saw a LIGHT and heard a VOICE that told him he would survive it all. The guards still beat him, a fact after which he put hahaha. Since he remained a devout Christian the rest of his life, he didn’t seem to mind that the VOICE didn’t promise pain-free survival.

He tells of the day the little makeshift door to his cell burst open. He said it was like looking at the sun and he could barely make out the features of the big Australian determined to save his life or at least take his body home. The Aussie picked him up from where he lay in his own filth, dying, and said “C’mon, Mate. You are going home.”

Man, that line is about as powerful as his closing statement, which was something along the lines of their being brothers bonded by an experience neither of them wanted to remember. Then, he makes those of us who really served, and especially those who understand what it means to believe in a principle deeply enough to die for it or at least to shut up for it, cry.

He simply says “Semper Fidelis!”

And nothing else.

My father refused to do anything with that letter containing the gutwrenching story of a man underground listening to the bombs being dropped followed by great silence more frightening than the explosions. He said he couldn’t possibly violate that man’s trust that the letter would be kept private but told me I could make a copy as long as I didn’t do anything with it until I contacted Red Newton’s family in Alabama and asked their permission.

Since the letter had only the ruralest of addresses it probably ain’t gonna happen (Did you know you could get a letter to My Father Box 168 63635 because that would get it to Bell City, Missouri and who didn’t know my father? Just dropped at a post office and feed store in the hills of Alabama where the skies were blue long before Leonard Skynard noticed and sent by the US mail with a couple of 3 cent stamps.

Hmmm…. Newtons in Alabama. Anybody know ’em?

DD
DD
  DD
April 6, 2019 7:41 am

Between Zentsuji and Takamatsu. And I’m only half joking. I would love to get a copy of the letter to his family’s descendants. It would honor my father and him both.

A real Two Fer.