Use of Fragment Five in Slaughterhouse - In Novel Slaughterhouse Five, Kurt Vonnegut unifies his nonlinear narratives using pieces of time, structure, and characters. The main character of Vonegut, who was a pilgrim in the pilgrimage of Billy in his life, "Free access to all events on the way" (SF 23). As a result, Billy 's life is presented as a series of plots without a chronological order. This reflects the structure of the novel, which has the beginning, the middle, and the end, but it is not in a traditional place.
Use of Fragment Five in Slaughterhouse - In Novel Slaughterhouse Five, Kurt Vonnegut unifies his nonlinear narratives using pieces of time, structure, and characters. The main character of Vonegut, who was a pilgrim in the pilgrimage of Billy in his life, "Free access to all events on the way" (SF 23). As a result, Billy 's life is presented as a series of plots without a chronological order. This reflects the structure of the novel, which has the beginning, the middle, and the end, but it is not in a traditional place.
In the novel "Slaughterhouse Five", Kurt Vonnegut unified the nonlinear story using pieces of time, structure, and characters. The hero of the Vonnegut pilgrim came back and forth in his own life. As a result, Billy 's life is presented as a series of plots without a chronological order. The first information about Billy is that he will "be in time". In this sentence, Vonnegut took time from invisible to concrete, so he can now use it to satisfy his own purpose. By using the word "unstuck", Vonnegut hinted that Billy is now free. Vonnegut quickly moved Billy to let him experience some of his life. By dividing Billy's life into this, Vonegott can put together the events that more closely encompass his life.