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Kurt Vonnegut Character Analysis: The Sirens Of Titan

752 Words4 Pages

Rhea Sofat
Mr. Lowe
AP Lit Pd. 3
15 January 2016
The Sirens of Titan Earth was invaded by the Martians who found no purpose in their fight, began killing one another using merely themselves, and then, utilizing the development of technology to kill all remaining Martians till nothing remained. This is seen both in The Sirens of Titan, by Kurt Vonnegut, and throughout our history for the past five thousand years or so, on a much more realistic level. This novel follows the life of Malachi Constant, a former CEO, as he takes a journey through the solar system where we see him transform from an Earthling, to a Martian, then to a space wanderer of Titan. Kurt Vonnegut is able to zoom in on a variety of social issues we face today, such as the …show more content…

Rumfoord’s religion that he created, “Church of God the Utterly Indifferent,” (page 231), implies that God likes some more than he likes others. In order to overcome the “ranks,” (page 233), everyone must wear weights, marry an ugly spouse, or eat a lot. This eliminates the possibility of people being different from a physical point, however this idea does not seem to carry across when observing the purpose everyone in the book has. Every Earthling was enlisted on the journey of finding a “three inch metal spaceship replacement part,” (page 271), for Salo, the machine from Tralfamadore. To people that believe they serve a more important role on this Earth than someone else, Vonnegut’s allegation may be insulting, however this is the exact reason he asserts it. By lessening the importance of human life by having humans be used by a machine, Vonnegut proclaims, “life is life is life,” (page). It is fate that brings the scrap metal in contact with the most absurd, selfish boy Vonnegut introduces us to, Chrono. The purpose of humans was to locate this piece, and the fact that Chrono had it, not a more important figure such as the Charles Darwin or Benjamin Franklin expresses the idea of fate from Vonnegut’s view. He proves the idea that everything does happen for a reason; everyone was put onto the Earth for a specific reason and you don’t simply come into that place through

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