Friday, April 23, 2010
An Abortion
'Seek happiness in tranquility
Magic Powers?
The Creature is Mad!
An Eve to the Adam
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Possible Suspects: The Daemon
Search for Knowledge
Advantage to Mankind
"'The labours of men of genius, however erroneously directed, scarcely ever fail in ultimately turning to the solid advantage of mankind'" (Shelly, 34).
This quote is a foreshadowing of the whole idea of the book. The use of the word scarcely indicates the preparation to tell of his own personal exception. Or maybe it is preparation of his defense of his work. However it ends, Frankenstein clearly thinks he has clearing new paths and seems to realize he may have dabbled in places he should not have. Knowing the book is about reanimation, he may be worried he created life like God, and should not have. He seemed to think any endeavors into science ended in good, but somehow did not this time.
Pioneer
Friendship
Friday, April 9, 2010
Snowden's Secret
"Yossarian was cold, too, and shivering uncontrollably. He felt goose pimples clacking all over him as he gazed down despondently at the grim secret Snowden had spilled all over the messy floor. It was easy to read the message in his entrails. Man was matter, that was Snowden’s secret. Drop him out a window and he’ll fall. Set fire to him and he’ll burn. Bury him and he’ll rot, like other kinds of garbage. That was Snowden’s secret. Ripeness was all" (Heller, 440).
Prayer
“Haven’t you got anything humorous that stays away from waters and valleys and God? I’d like to keep away from the subject of religion altogether if we can.”
The chaplain was apologetic. “I’m sorry, sir, but I’m afraid all the prayers I know are rather somber in tone and make at least some passing reference to God.”
“Then let’s get some new ones”(heller, 192).
Colonel Cathcart and the chaplain talk about maybe saying a group prayer before each mission. Cathcart wants to start saying the prayers because he thinks it will get him mentioned in the Saturday Evening Post. He only finds out later on that the enlisted men would have to be mentioned along with officers so he gave up his idea. His exclusion showed he was only interested in religion for use in his own advancement and reputation. Religion for the chaplain, to Catchart, also has nothing to do with faith in God. The chaplain tries to keep his faith as men constantly try to use religion as a tool without understanding the value of real faith. The chaplain is the only sane and realistic character in the army's group in this book, and he even struggles. The insanity in the officers reasoning is evident through their understanding of religion as simply a tool.
Snowden of Yesteryear
"Yossarian lost his nerve on the mission to Avignon because Snowden lost his guts" (Heller,234).
This is the first reference to Snowden's death that starts to explain what happened. There were references earlier asking what happened to him, and talking about how the plane went crazy. Now we see that Snowden died on the plane when his guts were spilled out. Yossarian lost it from this and its a critical point in his realization of Catch-22 to be a debasement of language. He starts to despise war from this point and constantly wants to disobey authority that is in place simply because people will listen to their oddly constructed words and think they are following orders for a good reason, when it may be complete nonsense. This is what symbolizes life and death and what is really at stake for Yossarian and when he begins to perpetually try to avoid death thinking everyone is trying to kill him, because they are and he is sane enough to realize there's a war and that the authority is debasing language to trap them all in the army.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Inevitable End
"One of the things he wanted to start screaming about was the surgeon’s knife that was almost certain to be waiting for him and everyone else who lived long enough to die. He wondered often how he would ever recognize the first chill, flush, twinge, ache, belch, sneeze, stain, lethargy, vocal slip, loss of balance or lapse of memory that would signal the inevitable beginning of the inevitable end" (Heller, 173).
Yossarian faces the war everyday but instead of accepting the fear of death it made him much more aware of the value and fragility of life. He can't stop thinking about all the ways in which he could die. His plane could get shot down or he could die of plenty of diseases. Yossarian is also fixated on the inevitability of death. In the army, Yossarian must feel trapped in his fear, and Catch-22 prevents him from escaping it. Though, his logic is flawed, as death is inevitable and is a greater trap than the army and he can never escape from that.
How to (not) Grow Alfalfa
Friday, April 2, 2010
Hatred
Clevinger has just faced a hearing where Lieutenant Scheisskopf and two other officers convict him of something that he didn't do and sentence him to punishment duty. He gets called Jewish and that his own friendlies will hate him; even after he denies being Jewish, he is told they will still hate him and Clevinger can see the hatred in their eyes. He wonders what compels armies to want to kill each other when they have no personal hatred, when the people in the war he can find that hate him more are his own allies.
Neverending Missions
There was a required number of flight missions a soldier needed before he completed his service in the air. Each pilot was always short of that number because each time they would get close, the required number would increase. Yossarian himself was near every time and tried to get his doctor friend to help with letting a shy few flights fly, but he never would. Yossarian kept flying thinking he could reach the every increasing number, just showing more of his insanity he got from perpetually putting himself in danger on missions.
Catch-22
This is the first explanation of the title. Here it can be observed how powerful a set of words are on Yossarian. He begins to believe the catch like its something to follow, when really it cannot be a real rule. Obviously, there is no way it can be legitimate, but Yossarian and all his comrades are actually driven insane by the circular illogic and crazy becomes normal.