Human begins with one of the smallest cells in the body. Then we will grow and evolve into a very complex mechanism consisting of individual parts such as brain, bone, and heart. However, no matter how complex it is, human beings are simply works, and each part works together in cooperation. Similarly, artwork consists of individual elements that collaborate on the overall work. From selection of colors, until the artist brushes in a specific direction to create various textures, this work will not be complete without the finest elements.
Postmodernism at Cat's Cradle of Vonnegut Cat's Cradle is a book that provides lots of points for literary discussions. One possible theme is post-modern features of this book. In this study, Ihab Hassan's article "Toward the concept of postmodernism" was used as a source of secondary literature defining the characteristics of postmodernism. The most obvious and most common feature is the recognition of the entire religion by postmodernism synonyms, personality handling, dynamic tension, chaos, and postmodernism.
Facey's "Lucky Life" and Chapin's "Cat in the Cradle" share the theme "Change is inevitable", "Change may happen suddenly", "Change is not necessarily beneficial" theme . In Chapin's "Crad in the Cradle", my son will inevitably grow and change. The structure of "The cat is in the cradle" shows his son's growth very quickly and makes the change very suddenly. In "Lucky Life", Facey is often forced to work from an early age, and employers often encounter sudden changes, such as almost every month change. "Change is not always beneficial" is a theme shared by two texts. In "Cats in the cradle", even if the father and son have made major changes, their relationship remains the same. This sometimes suggests that the change is not worth it. This is an important theme when Facey's Lucky Life, especially Facey, has to overcome the fear of war.
Kurt Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle is one of the most wonderful anthropological works of the century, including the end of religion, science and the world, whose subject is the symbolic nature of book names. The theme of the cat's cradle is used throughout the book, but all of it is in society. Cats Cradle is basically a game of almost every age and almost every country; "Eskimo knows it even" (Cat's Cradle 114). This is a game that wraps around the player's hands, loops, and puts strings around the endless rope, ring, 6 feet circumference. It is used symbolically and historically to express a lot of things like a story or an image of a character whose name is a cradle of a cat. According to Vonnegut, it actually means "only a bunch of X will pass to someone." (C. C. 114) This gives Vonnegut the definition of many human creatures in the world.