登陆注册
34467700000010

第10章 Part Ⅱ

An Ecological View of Vonnegut:Life and Infuences

A。 Life

Kurt Vonnegut was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, on November 11,1922. His parents were both German descendants from well-off German immigrants who made their fortune and reputation in Midwestern America since the early 19th century。The clan of Vonnegut was composed of men of intellect, cultivation, good sense, and social dedication。Kurt Vonnegut's father and grandfather were both renowned architects, a fact that Vonnegut took great pride in。On the mother's side, fortune and wealth were thechief story。The family was the owner of the most successful brewery in Indianapolis before the Prohibition, ****** enough money to support an extravagant upper-class life for three generations。As a result, his mother developed a delicate taste and insisted on an aristocratic style of living。

As Kurt Vonnegut remarked later,“My mother was addicted to being rich, to servants and unlimited charge accounts, to giving lavish dinner parties, to taking frequent frst-class trips to Europe”(Shields 22)。Consequently, she was distant to her children, thinking it was the task of the maid or housekeeper to take care of them。Since little, Kurt Vonnegut was in search of a motherly figure and craved for affection。Such desires were mostly fulflled by his sister Alice, who was only fve years older, and Ida Young, the black family cook and housekeeper。The parents lived an easy and luxurious life in the frst years of their marriage and squandered most of their inherited money。When the Great Depression overtook the country in 1929,the family suffered a sudden drop of living standards and a“precipitous fall in society”,which was humiliation to Edith Vonnegut the mother and led to her mental depression and eventual suicide。

Kurt Vonnegut had a brother and a sister, both of whom received upper-class private education because they came in the prime of their parents'life。 Bernard the brother showed much talent in science at an early age and was the apple of the eye to his parents, which became a source of jealousy for Kurt。Bernard later became an MIT graduate and a leading scientist in General Electric。He created quite a sensation when he and his colleagues succeeded in manufacturing moisture in the atmosphere to the effect of snowfall。The sense of sibling competition for Kurt with Bernard lasted most of his life, which later evolved in Kurt's life into a battle between art and science。While Bernard considered art primarily ornamental and useless, Kurt spent most of his life trying to prove that art was the family tradition(the first ancestor of the Vonneguts was a writer of a kind, describing the wilderness of America in the early years ofsettlement;his architect grandfather and father were both well attuned to art),and that science and technology, if let go unbridled, could bring doom to the human race as well as the entire universe。

Alice the sister served as the little mummy for young Kurt and the emotional support for their father later when their mother went basically insane after the family's financial downfall。 In personality, Alice was peculiar。She possessed“considerable gifts as a painter and sculptor”,but to the dismay of her father and her brother, she“did next to nothing”with her gifts。She was oftentimes quoted as saying,“Just because people have talent, that doesn't mean they have to do something with it”(FWTD 37)。Alice married to an equally impractical man, Jim Adams, who“majored in fun”(Shields 52)and dreamed of ****** big money by selling inventions of his own。Poor as their life was, it was a loving family, with children running around in a house filled with chickens and dogs and birds。However, tragedy struck in 1958.Jim was killed in a train crash and Alice, already confned in hospital for cancer, died the night she heard the news。The four boys of theirs were orphaned within 48 hours。Kurt Vonnegut adopted three of them, in spite of the fact that he had already three children to provide for。

Due to the financial downfall of the family, Kurt Vonnegut did not get the kind of upper-class education that his older siblings received, but he found what he liked in Shortridge High School—writing。 He fared well as an editor for the school newspaper, The Shortridge Daily Echo, one of the only two high-school dailies of the country at the time(PS 62)。He would have succeeded in getting a job as a journalist for Indianapolis Star if Bernard had not intervened。The then MIT graduate student in physics told him to do something more practical than becoming“daubers in art”。At that time in America,“the laurels would go to scientists, technicians, the practitioners of the practical arts”。As a result, Kurt Vonnegut ended up in Cornell, majoring in biology and chemistry(Shields 34-5)。

As Vonnegut admitted later, in Cornell“I was in a real mess”(Shields 35)。 He funked most of the science courses, chemistry, physics, math, and biology。“I had actually twice funked a course whose purpose is to exclude people like me from careers as scientists, which is thermodynamics,”said Vonnegut in a 1994 speech。In spite of his detest of the subjects, the college training did help him obtain a familiarity with technology that would enable him to write about science and technology“with a fair amount of expertness”。Vonnegut later contended that all writers should learn more about science because they need it to respond to their times and environment more reasonably, and“it's such an interesting part of their environment”(CKV 112,120)。

In contrast to his poor performance in the science subjects, Vonnegut found satisfaction in writing and became a popular editor for the university paper, the Cornell Daily Sun, the oldest independent college daily in the United States。 Still, as he failed in too many courses, he dropped out in January 1943.After that, he decided to enlist for the army, ready to fght in WW Ⅱ。He had been hard-headed against the war and wrote editorials for the Sun in support of isolationism, thinking that this is the only reasonable response to Hitler and America should not rush to arms。But when Japanese struck Pearl Harbor in January 1943,he began to think that it was“clearly a war that had to be fought and there are very few of those in history。It was worth fghting”(Shields 48)。

His parents were ashamed of the decision。 To his father, his son's becoming a common foot soldier with a backpack and a rife was low and incommensurate to his education and family background。For his fragile mother,“the prospect of losing her son in the impending holocaust made her cup of troubles overflow”(PS 55)。Before leaving for the European battlefeld, Vonnegut surprised his folks by arriving home on a three-day pass, spit-and-polished in his uniform。However, on Mother's Day, his last day of leave, he and his sister found their mother dead in bed from anoverdose of sleeping pills。

What happened afterwards is well-known, as it led to his famous novel, Slaughterhouse-Five。 He was shipped to Europe and put to the front。The frst battle that he entered was the Battle of the Bugle, in December 1944.It turned out to be also his last—the battle was the last victory on the German side and the biggest defeat the American armies had ever experienced in history(PS 87)。Vonnegut and his fellow soldiers were captured and sent to Dresden, where they were made to work as laborers。On the night of February 13,1945,the British and American air forces operated the frebombing on Dresden。135,000 people were killed in two hours。The beautiful city, the“Florence on the Elbe”,was burned down overnight。“It was a terrible thing for the son of an architect to see,”Vonnegut later said of the experience(CKV 12)。He and other POWs survived the disaster only by hiding two stories below the ground in the meat locker of the slaughterhouse where they were housed。The next day, they were made to evacuate all the corpses。This traumatic experience became a lasting influence and the framing story throughout Vonnegut's writing career。

After the war, he got married and was enrolled in the University of Chicago on the GI Bill, in anthropology, which, to his pleasure, was“a science that was mostly poetry”(Shields 87)。 The study of cultural anthropology opened his mind and enabled him to see different people and cultures in an equal and connected way。He also derived the idea of“folk society”there, upon which he later developed his theory of“artifcial extended families”。Unfortunately, however, because of the untimely arrival of their frst baby, he had to quit in 1947 after conscientious efforts failed in finishing his thesis。He wouldn't get his MA diploma until his ffth novel, Cat's Cradle(1963),was published。With the infuence of his brother, he got a position as the public relations man with the General Electric Corporation in Schenectady, New York, to report on his brother'ssuccessful experiment。Although he later found this job constraining, the experience with one of the largest companies in the country gave Vonnegut a valuable glimpse into the operations of big businesses and the power of science and technology。His first novel, Player Piano, was expressly modeled on General Electric。

Vonnegut's first short story,“Report on the Barnhouse Effect”,was published in February,1949,in Collier's magazine。 It turned out to be very well paid($750,two-month pay at GE)。So after a couple of more short stories got published, at the end of 1950,Kurt Vonnegut quitted his job at General Electric and moved to Cape Cod, where he lived as a freelance writer。This became the beginning of his long and hard journey in search of recognition, as described earlier in this book。

We learn of Vonnegut's life and experiences from a number of sources:scattered autobiography in the“introduction”,“prologue”,“editor's note”or first chapters of his novels;autobiographical essays in the non-fction collections;biographies, interviews and conversations。 But although some facts about his life are heavily dwelt upon, such as the suicide of his mother on Mother's Day before he was going to the European battlefeld, his captivity in Germany after the defeat of the Battle of the Bulge, and, most of all, the experience of the Dresden frebombing, but some aspects of his life remained blind spots。For example, how did he grow up as a young child, particularly during the Great Depression?All the narratives about his early life are sketchy in comparison to the substantiality of other periods。In a letter he wrote to the headmaster of a school that banned Slaughterhouse-Five, he talked of the period saying that he“did a lot of farm work as a boy”(PS 5),as a proof that he, as a writer, is real, robust, healthy, and down to earth。But we know no detail about this experience。In his 500-odd-page biography, the only complete life story of Kurt Vonnegut, Charles J。Shields does not bring much light to such dimmed spots either。

Such lacking is conspicuous with Vonnegut's“animal experiences”。Probably due to the lack of perspective and critical interest, as is always the case in studies concerning the ecological outlook of authors, we found very scarce accounts about Vonnegut's experience with animals, especially in his formative years。However, this does not mean Vonnegut had no interest in animals。Charles J。Shields mentions one thing in the biography which verifies the belief that Kurt Vonnegut likes animals since young。When choosing courses for freshman science at Shortridge High School, the biographer relates,“he wanted to enroll in zoology because he liked animals”(29)。In a review of Galapagos, Peter J。Reed observes quite emphatically that Vonnegut“has always had a warm heart for animals”。He cites an example in parentheses that“in his high school writing he borrowed the nom de plume‘Ferdy’from that wonderful children’s book,‘Ferninand and the Bull’”(1990:63)。In the introduction to his conversation with Vonnegut, Robert Taylor gives a deion of the setting where the Vonneguts were living:It is a white-and-gray Barnstable farmhouse。“In the darkness of the eaves scuffe barn swallows。”He quotes Mrs。Vonnegut as saying:“We built the barn for them, really”(CKV 7)。He then gives special attention to the birds that say“Poo-tee-weet”in the stillness of the summer day:“Vonnegut, who knows bird language, has reproduced this phonetic in his fction, something that has meaning when human language fails”(CKV 7-8)。

Other evidences of Vonnegut's love for animals can be found in the authorial introductions to his novels。 For instance, in Slapstick, he describes his love for dogs:

Also:I cannot distinguish between the love I have for people and the love I have for dogs。

When a child, and not watching comedians on flms or listening to comedians on the radio, I used to spend a lot of time rolling around on rugs with uncritically affectionate dogs we had。(SS 2-3)Vonnegut's attachment to animals also bears out in the fact that in most of his novels, at least one of the characters—sometimes the leading character, sometimes a minor one—is assigned a dog as companion。 Rumfoord in The Sirens of Titan, Dwayne in Breakfast of Champions, and Selena in Galapagos are all such examples。In Slaughterhouse-Five, to illustrate the loneliness of Billy Pilgrim in spite of his postwar comforts and riches, the narrator says,“There wasn't a dog, either。”Quickly but in a separate paragraph, he continues,“There used to be a dog named Spot, but he died。So it goes。Billy had liked Spot a lot, and Spot had liked him”(SF 62)。The sadness for losing the dog friend is apparent。

There are also indications of his affection for animals in his public statements。For example, when discussing the merits and demerits of Ernest Hemingway, he remarks,“I hate his killing big animals—it seemed so unnecessary”(CKV 275)。Besides, self-mocking as he is, he always compares himself to animals。For instance, in the opening chapter of Fates Worse Than Death, he remarks,“Here we go again with real life and opinions made to look like one big, preposterous animal not unlike an invention by Dr。Seuss, the great writer and illustrator of children's books, like an oobleck or a grinch or a lorax, or like a sneechperhaps”(FWTD 19)。As he does with Billy Pilgrim and many other characters, Vonnegut presents himself as one of those awkward and preposterous animals。

There are also concrete clues in his life。 When Vonnegut was of school age, his parents sent him, like his brother and sister before him, to the Orchard School, a private progressive school。The school was operated on the educational theorist John Dewey's belief that students should be a little community of doers。There were a lot of hands-on activities for the children。Vonnegut loved it there。He had responsibilities and others depended on him。“He joined with classmates in caring for Billy the goat;running the school library;operating the goodies store;even managing a student savings bank。”Watching over them was a teacher and naturalist, who eventually became the school headmaster, Hillis L。Howie。He was a benevolent man who cultivated in the children individual abilities and respect for self and others。He believed as Aristotle wrote,“For the things we have to learn before we can do them, we learn by doing them。”So the children built whirligigs while they were studying weather, model ships when the subject was exploration, and planted a garden, which they harvested in the fall, putting fresh vegetables out for lunch they had raised themselves。

In the summer of 1938,when he was about to begin his junior year at Shortridge High School, Vonnegut had another experience with Hillis Howie which turned out to be a life-changing infuence。 He joined Hillis Howie's nine-week prairie camping trip to the American West。It was a hard trek into the wilderness。Howie deliberately“sought out the remote and generally unknown wilderness regions”,as he said,Sometimes we pretended that we were the first white men to penetrate these wilds。 In many spots, the boys had an opportunity to compare the unspoiled land with country that had been‘developed。'We led a ****** life, did our own cooking, gathered firewood, sagebrush or buffalo chips for fuel and slept under the stars almost every night。We were providing a pioneer experience for the boys in a frontier part of the nation。(qtd。in Shield,“Prairie Adventure”)

In a 1987 interview with Hank Nuwer, Vonnegut recounted this experience in great detail and with deep affection:

We had a truck and three station wagons, and we traveled all over the West。 We had specific missions from the Field Museum in Chicago。I was a mammalogist, for instance, and I put trap lines out every night。In fact, when I went out, which was about 1938,I caught a subspecies of the tawny whitefoot mouse which had not been seen before, and presumably its pelt is at the Field Museum if anyone wants to look at it。When I was in the army telling someone about this, he immediately named it Meesis Vonnegeesis。(CKV 252-3)

The expedition was an unforgettable experience of adventure, inspiration, and self-discovery for a boy at the tender age。 Shields thus describes his excitement:

Away from the pall of his home life where his parents sometimes quarreled late into the night, and away from his brother's talk about science that“bored the ****”out of him, Kurt came into his own。 He mounted an outcropping of rock and, pounding his skinny ribcage, let out a Tarzan yell that drew shouts of admiring laughter from the other boys。He was just like them—he belonged。(“Prairie Adventure”)

Commenting on Howie in his later years, Vonnegut remarked,“It took me a long time to realize what a great man Hollis Hillie was。 That's part of the American experience to suddenly come across a truly great person who never becomes rich or famous, but who is enormously benefcial just to those near him。Hillis Howie was such a person, a great naturalist, very kind and strong with boys”(CKV 252)。The infuence was more than just the love for animals and the desire to explore the secrets of life。It was about worldview。As Vonnegut refects affectionately:

The value system under which I try to operate relative to animals and plants and the earth and persons with cultures different from mine is one I learned from him。 There are thousands of us who were lucky enough to come under his infuence, and my guess is that we are more at home on this planet, and more respectful of it, than most of our neighbors are。(Shields 2011:15)

It is small wonder then that Vonnegut dedicated Galapagos, his fourteenth novel and one he would grade A (CKV 259),to Hillis Howie。 He also created a character in the model of this beloved teacher, Mary Hepburn, the high school teacher who plays the role of“Mother Nature Personifed”in the survival and propagation of the human race isolated on the Galapagos Islands。For Vonnegut, the wilderness trek in the summer of 1938 was an experience of rebirth。Hillis Howie, like Mary Hepburn, was the middle wife who brought into the world his new life。

Every summer, the Vonneguts went to their summer resort at Lake Maxinkuckee(spelt by Vonnegut as“Maxincuckee”)。 It was a large body of pure water surrounded by forests of oak, beech, and maple。Every summer the Vonneguts and their relatives enjoyed sunshine, bathing, swimming, rowing, reading by the evening campfre, and family games。It was also a great occasion for refreshing their German legacy。It was there that young Kurt, Jr。no longer felt neglected and lonely。On the contrary, he basked in the warm feelings of affection and belonging。The feeling was so precious for him that when he married, he arranged his honeymoon visit to the Lake。“Kurt wanted his bride to see it with him”,although their summer cottage was already sold before they went there。

Many years later, the memory could still bring back sweetness and warmth。“[……]everything about that lake was imprinted on my mind when it was so little and was so eager for information, it will be my lake as long as I live”(FWTD 50)。Time and again, Vonnegut claimed that Lake Maxinkuckee was“an enchanted body of water to me,”it was“my Aegean Sea”(Shields 23)。Like the oceansto Herman Melville and the Maine forests to Nathaniel Hawthorne, Lake Maxinkuckee was the spiritual sanctuary for Kurt Vonnegut。He needed to constantly look back to feel at home。It was a defning experience that shaped his“understanding of time and space and[……]destiny”(FWTD 50)。As he said in Fates Worse Than Death,

No matter where I am, and even if I have no clear idea where I am, and no matter how much trouble I may be in, I can achieve a blank and shining serenity if only I can reach the very edge of a natural body of water。[……]This is because I made my frst mental maps of the world, in the summertime when I was a little child, on the shores of Lake Maxincuckee[……]。(49)

Apart from the family gathering, the lake, with its unique geography and the open, sunny, refreshing natural scenery must have contributed to this profound and lasting effect。 With this knowledge, we can understand why in two of his most sentimental and romantic novels, The Sirens of the Titan and Galapagos, the happiest time of his characters is spent by the water:in the former, it is exactly a lake, while in the latter, it is the deep blue sea。

In sharp contrast to the lake experience, the experience in Dresden had traumatic effects on Vonnegut, who was then only twenty-one。 Together with the appalling sight of dead bodies killed during the firebomb, Vonnegut encountered the miserable scene of a host of maimed zoo animals。Shields gives a deion to this encounter:

They passed the corpse of a boy with his burned dog at the end of a leach;bodies of children dressed in party clothes;blackened drivers slumped at the wheels of their cars;couples who had leaped into fountains for safety and plunged into boiling water instead。 The Dresden zoo, blown open by direct hits, had released its ark of animals into the wild。The men spotted a llama mounting slopes ofdebris。Exotic birds, with no trees to sit in, preened themselves on twisted iron railings。A chimpanzee, once popular with children, sat alone without hands。(2011:73)

Vonnegut also talks about the Dresden zoo in Fates Worse Than Death。 In Chapter Eleven, he recounts how a stranger gave him a document from a“Bomber's Baedeker”from World War Ⅱ,because he wanted Vonnegut to feel confirmed that“Dresden was no more a military target than Kalamazoo, Michigan, is today”and that bombers did have the ******* to decide where to drop the bombs if there were extra ones。Vonnegut says,“There was a zoo in Dresden for the entertainment of potential soldiers and nurses。The Baedeker for Bombers missed that one, but the bombs didn’t。You should have seen the giraffe after the frestorm。(I did)”(108)。Sparse as the deion is, the suffering, fear, and bewilderment the animals must have felt are not hard to imagine。The barbarity of the war refected in the fate of animals must have registered deep in the mind of the future writer, so that whenever he writes of destructive forces, he never forgets to give special attention to their impact on animals。In his creation of the Tralfamadore zoo in Slaughterhouse-Five, although the zoo animals are not present, Vonnegut might as well have the maimed and lost animals in mind。

同类推荐
  • 愿时光待你好

    愿时光待你好

    都说岁月是把杀猪刀,但对有些女人来说,时光是把琢玉剑。岁月的存在,仿佛就是为了给她们曾经青涩柔弱的周身,罩上一层淡金色的光芒。刀枪不入,只收爱与智。难道时光待她们格外青眼?其实呢,岁月终会让每个人过上想要的生活。关于自己:做一个任性的自己,做自己喜欢的事。关于感情:有知己三五作伴,和喜欢的人白首相守。关于生活:有很多次说走就走的旅行,也在家门前的小院种满鲜花收获芬芳。关于梦想:把它像宝贝一样藏好,从不放弃,也别慌张,总有一天它会令你的生命闪闪发光。
  • 莎士比亚情诗录

    莎士比亚情诗录

    本书收录了《罗密欧与朱丽叶》、《十四行诗集》、《莎士比亚全集》等书中的情诗录百余篇。书后还附有莎士比亚年谱。
  • 中国现代文学经典收藏馆-沉郁的梅冷城

    中国现代文学经典收藏馆-沉郁的梅冷城

    中国一世纪的经典绝唱震撼几代人心灵的不朽篇章,作者包括鲁迅、朱自清等作家,丛书包括:茶杯里的风波、沉郁的梅冷城、春风沉醉的晚上、春风回梦记、从百草园到三味书屋、第三生命、丰收、光明在我们的前面、荷塘月色、红烛、狂人日记、等文章。
  • 恰似春风来

    恰似春风来

    有人说写诗的人不过是喜欢吟风诵月罢了,我倒觉得,诗者之所以吟咏,大抵是出于敏感而多思的情愫,正如此,方对世间万物有着更多的感怀。
  • 走向永恒

    走向永恒

    东汽,对我来说不是一个陌生的存在,“5·12”地震之前曾不止一次前往汉旺,在那些紧靠巨大山体的车间里参观。对一个从事文学工作的人来说……
热门推荐
  • 雪花漫天我为后

    雪花漫天我为后

    经历上一世的恩恩怨怨,一个远近闻名的丑女,又将如何生存呢?
  • 大明第一太子

    大明第一太子

    洪武元年,奉天殿上,龙椅上的明太祖朱元璋一挥手,礼部尚书捧起册封诏书宣读起来奉天承运皇帝、诏曰:朕之长子朱标,为皇后所出,宗室首嗣,天资粹美,品格贵重,兹恪遵初诏,载稽典礼,俯顺舆情,谨告天地,宗庙,社稷,授以册宝,立为皇太子,正位东宫,以重万年之统,以繁四海之心。布告天下,咸使闻知!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 儒门术士

    儒门术士

    大梦谁先觉?平生我自知。这是一个关于儒生入世修仙的故事……
  • 红衣为珏

    红衣为珏

    现下穿越大多千篇一律,我想写点不太一样的。(本文作者取名废简介废!!各种废啊,若有欠扁之处还望包含,见谅见谅~)
  • 我的狐狸陛下

    我的狐狸陛下

    她二十一世纪的顶级医药世家掌舵人,却被至亲所杀穿越而来,却在穿越之初一眼望见了一个紫眸妖孽,从此痴缠几世轮回。“诶~哪里来的小奶狗”甄馨抱起地上油黑的一小团。某妖孽磨牙,被气的浑身发抖心中默念“是能上天入地的九尾神狐!”甄馨捧起了那一小团,往自己的怀中紧了紧:“怎么一直在抖,一定冻坏了吧。”某妖孽朝着甄馨的胸前蹭了一蹭,无节操的摇了摇紧紧缠在一起的尾巴。一旁见状的斩风惊愕的睁大了眼睛,这还是他家英明神武,盖世无双的主上吗!
  • 逆世繁华:赋神召唤师

    逆世繁华:赋神召唤师

    说好的都是杀手特工穿越呢?她只是一个大学生呀!不过既来之则安之,她本不想做什么,可是生活压力太大了啊!从此踏上了一条“不归路”。且看她如何步步问鼎天下巅峰吧!
  • 平平无奇努力的你

    平平无奇努力的你

    迷茫的年纪和懵懂无知的你,对未来充满迷茫的你,是否该去寻找方向了
  • 仙本无纪

    仙本无纪

    洪荒年间,各部落战争频繁,人,魔,妖三方乱战,无根无据只凭借本能厮杀,三万年来由于三足鼎力无法灭掉任何一族,无奈只好罢战,三方首领聚集谈判.........这为仙的诞生创下了条件....
  • 鼎修异世录

    鼎修异世录

    异世大陆之中,一种不同的修炼之途。天之骄子般的人物被夺了根基,一夜成渣。是在泥泞中沉沦,还是英雄起于微末?待明日云起之时,扶摇直上宇为枝!让我们一起携手大道,一同见证靳秋问鼎之路,君临寰宇!