Why should you read Kurt Vonnegut? - Mia Nacamulli

1,400,822 views ・ 2018-11-29

TED-Ed


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Billy Pilgrim can’t sleep
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because he knows aliens will arrive to abduct him in one hour.
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He knows the aliens are coming because he has become “unstuck” in time,
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causing him to experience events out of chronological order.
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Over the course of Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-five,
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he hops back and forth between a childhood trip to the Grand Canyon,
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his life as a middle-aged optometrist,
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his captivity in an intergalactic zoo,
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the humiliations he endured as a war prisoner, and more.
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The title of Slaughterhouse-five and much of its source material
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came from Vonnegut’s own experiences in World War II.
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As a prisoner of war, he lived in a former slaughterhouse in Dresden,
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where he took refuge in an underground meat locker
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while Allied forces bombed the city.
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When he and the other prisoners finally emerged,
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they found Dresden utterly demolished.
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After the war, Vonnegut tried to make sense of human behavior
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by studying an unusual aspect of anthropology:
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the shapes of stories,
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which he insisted were just as interesting as the shapes of pots or spearheads.
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To find the shape, he graphed the main character’s fortune
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from the beginning to the end of a story.
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The zany curves he generated revealed common types of fairy tales and myths
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that echo through many cultures.
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But this shape can be the most interesting of all.
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In a story like this,
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it’s impossible to distinguish the character’s good fortune from the bad.
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Vonnegut thought this kind of story was the truest to real life,
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in which we are all the victims of a series of accidents,
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unable to predict how events will impact us long term.
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He found the tidy, satisfying arcs of many stories at odds with this reality,
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and he set out to explore the ambiguity
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between good and bad fortune in his own work.
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When Vonnegut ditched clear-cut fortunes,
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he also abandoned straightforward chronology.
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Instead of proceeding tidily from beginning to end, in his stories
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“All moments, past, present and future always have existed, always will exist.”
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Tralfamadorians, the aliens who crop up in many of his books,
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see all moments at once.
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They “can see where each star has been and where it is going,
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so that the heavens are filled with rarefied, luminous spaghetti.”
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But although they can see all of time,
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they don’t try to change the course of events.
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While the Trafalmadorians may be at peace with their lack of agency,
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Vonnegut’s human characters are still getting used to it.
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In The Sirens of Titan,
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when they seek the meaning of life in the vastness of the universe,
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they find nothing but “empty heroics, low comedy, and pointless death.”
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Then, from their vantage point within a “chrono-synclastic infundibulum,”
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a man and his dog see devastating futures for their earthly counterparts,
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but can’t change the course of events.
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Though there aren’t easy answers available, they eventually conclude
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that the purpose of life is “to love whoever is around to be loved.”
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In Cat’s Cradle, Vonnegut’s characters turn to a different source of meaning:
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Bokonism,
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a religion based on harmless lies that all its adherents recognize as lies.
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Though they’re aware of Bokonism’s lies,
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they live their lives by these tenets anyway,
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and in so doing develop some genuine hope.
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They join together in groups called Karasses, which consist of people we
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“find by accident but […] stick with by choice”—
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cosmically linked around a shared purpose.
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These are not to be confused with Granfalloons,
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groups of people who appoint significance to actually meaningless associations,
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like where you grew up, political parties, and even entire nations.
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Though he held a bleak view of the human condition, Vonnegut believed strongly that
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“we are all here to help each other get through this thing, whatever it is."
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We might get pooped and demoralized,
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but Vonnegut interspersed his grim assessments
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with more than a few morsels of hope.
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His fictional alter ego, Kilgore Trout, supplied this parable:
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two yeast sat “discussing the possible purposes of life
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as they ate sugar and suffocated in their own excrement.
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Because of their limited intelligence,
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they never came close to guessing that they were making champagne.”
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In spite of his insistence that we’re all here to fart around,
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in spite of his deep concerns about the course of human existence,
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Vonnegut also advanced the possibility, however slim,
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that we might end up making something good.
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And if that isn’t nice, what is?
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