Реферат

Реферат на тему Catch 22 Essay Research Paper Joseph Heller

Работа добавлена на сайт bukvasha.net: 2015-06-15

Поможем написать учебную работу

Если у вас возникли сложности с курсовой, контрольной, дипломной, рефератом, отчетом по практике, научно-исследовательской и любой другой работой - мы готовы помочь.

Предоплата всего

от 25%

Подписываем

договор

Выберите тип работы:

Скидка 25% при заказе до 26.12.2024


Catch 22 Essay, Research Paper

Joseph Heller satirizes, among other matters, red tape and bureaucracy in his

first novel, Catch-22. The novel concerns itself with a World War II bombardier

named Yossarian who suddenly realizes the danger of his position and tries

various means to extricate himself from further missions. Yossarian is driven

crazy by the Germans, who keep shooting at him when he drops bombs on them, and

by his American superiors, who seem less concerned about winning the war than

they are about getting promoted. Heller spent eight years writing Catch-22, is a

former student at three universities–New York, Columbia and Oxford–and a

former teacher at Pennsylvania State College. From 1942 to 1945 he served as a

combat bombardier in the Twelfth Air Force and was stationed on the island of

Corsica where he flew over 60 combat missions. That experience provided the

groundwork for this novel. (Way, 120) (Usborne) The protagonist and hero of the

novel is John Yossarian, a captain in the Air Force and a lead bombardier in his

squadron, but he hates the war. During the latter half of World War II,

Yossarian is stationed with his Air Force squadron on the island of Pianosa,

near the Italian coast and the Mediterranean Sea. (Heller) The squadron is

thrown thoughtlessly into brutal combat situations and bombing runs on which it

is more important for them to capture a good aerial photograph of an explosion

than to destroy their target. Their colonels continually raise the number of

missions they are required to fly before being sent home so that no one is ever

sent home. Heller’s satire targets a variety of bureaucrats, the

military-industrial complex, and the business ethic and economic arrangements of

American society. Humor rising out of the crazy logic of modern warfare hits

squarely on the mark. (Hicks 32). The following passage demonstrates the humor

and enlightens the reader about the book’s title and the major cause of

Yossarian’s problems: Yossarian looked at him soberly and tried another

approach. " Is Orr crazy?" "He sure is," Doc Daneeka said.

"Can you ground him?" "I sure can. But first he has to ask me to.

That’s part of the rule." "Then why doesn’t he ask you to?"

"Because he’s crazy, " Doc Daneeka said. " He has to be crazy to

keep flying combat missions after all the close calls he’s had. Sure, I can

ground him. But first he has to ask me to." "That’s all he has to do

to be grounded?" "That’s all. Let him ask me." "And then you

can ground him?" Yossarian asked. "No. Then I can’t ground him."

"You mean there’s a catch?" "Sure there’s a catch," Doc

Daneeka replied. "Catch-22. Anyone who wants to get out of combat duty

isn’t really crazy." Most of the supporting characters in Catch-22 are

cardboard figures that are only distinctive to the reader by their inane

obsessions. Each lives with a particularly contorted view of the war in which he

believes that he can function in the world as he pleases and that his dealings

will achieve his objectives. (Kennard 83) The fantastically powerful mess

officer, Milo controls an international black market syndicate and is revered in

obscure corners all over the world. He ruthlessly chases after profit and bombs

his own men as part of a contract with Germany. Milo insists that everyone in

the squadron will benefit from being part of the syndicate, and that

"everyone has a share." The ambitious, unintelligent colonel in charge

of Yossarian’s squadron, Colonel Cathcart, wants to be a general. He tries to

impress his superiors by bravely volunteering his men for dangerous combat duty

whenever he gets the chance. He continually raises the number of combat missions

required of the men before they can be sent home. Lieutenant Milo Minderbinder,

the mess officer, is the supreme champion of the profit motive and free

enterprise. He knows how to buy eggs for 7 cents and to sell them at a profit

for 5 cents. He contrives with Axis agents to bomb his own airfield when the

Germans make him a reasonable offer: cost plus 6 per cent. He does this because

he desperately needs more funds in his misguided quest to corner the Egyptian

cotton market. Milo’s loyalties lay in general with capitalistic enterprise and

specifically with M & M Enterprises. He lives by the principle that

"what’s good for the syndicate is good for the country," despite the

diametrically opposed arrangement of his position and his philosophy. (Seltzer

298-99) Colonel Cathcart tries to scheme his way ahead; he thinks of successful

actions as "feathers in his cap" and unsuccessful ones as "black

eyes." For example, as the commanding officer, he keeps raising the number

of missions a man has to fly before becoming eligible for leave back to the US,

and this number keeps increasing as the men keep going out and coming back from

their bombing runs. The reasoning behind this is sound: experienced pilots have

a better chance of surviving and accomplishing their mission than do green

airmen. However, his motivation is not. Yossarian and his friends endure a

nightmarish, absurd existence defined by bureaucracy and violence: they are

inhuman resources in the eyes of their blindly ambitious superior officers.

Because Cathcart cannot identify for sure what the higher headquarter generals

think and because they themselves loathe and oppose each other, Cathcart’s

"feathers" keep turning into "black eyes." (Lindberg

231-258) Still, no one but Yossarian seems to realize that there is a war going

on; everyone thinks he is crazy when he insists that millions of people are

trying to kill him. Yossarian is unique because he takes the whole war

personally–rather than being swayed by national ideals or abstract principles,

Yossarian is furious that his life is constantly in danger, and not as a result

of his own misdeeds. His powerful desire to live has led him to the conclusion

that millions of people are out to get him, and he has decided either to live

forever or, ironically, die trying. In the end, he takes a possibly morally

suspect, but psychologically honest choice left to him by deserting to Sweden.

(Merrill 139-52) Yossarian loses his nerve for war. He is placed in ridiculous,

absurd, desperate, and tragic circumstances–he sees friends die and disappear,

his squadron bombed by its own mess officer, and colonels and generals who

bravely volunteer their men for the most perilous battle. The paradoxical law

called Catch-22, the mechanism behind this military’s abnormalities, haunts him.

In the end, Yossarian decides to save his own life by deserting the army; he

turns his back on the dehumanizing cold machinery of the military, and

ultimately, and finally, rejects the rule of Catch-22.

Heller, Joseph. Catch-22. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1961 Hicks,

Granville. "Medals for Madness." Saturday Review. 44.40 (October 7,

1961) Kennard, Jean E. "Joseph Heller: At War with Absurdity." MOSAIC

IV/3 (University of Manitoba, 1971) Lindberg, Gary. "Playing for Real – The

Confidence Man in American Literature." Oxford University Press (1982)

Merrill, Robert. "The Structure and Meaning of Catch-22. Studies in

American Fiction. 14.2 (1986) Seltzer, Leon F. "Milo’s ‘Culpable

Innocence’: Absurdity as Moral Insanity in ‘Catch-22.’" Papers on Language

and Literature. 15.3 (1979) Usborne, David. "Joseph Heller, Master of Black

Satire." Independent News. (Dec 14, 1999): 2pp. Online. Internet. Feb 12

2000. Available: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/World/Americas/heller141299.shtml

Way, Brian. "Formal Experiment and Social Discontent: Joseph Heller’s Catch

22." The Penguin Companion to American Literature. Ed. Malcolm Bradbury,

Eric Mottram, and Jean Franco.


1. Доклад География туризма Таиланд Паттайя
2. Реферат на тему Crit Of The Social Contract Essay Research
3. Реферат на тему Эволюция семейно брачных отношений
4. Тесты на тему Некоторые вопросы по экономической истории
5. Курсовая Издержки производства и их виды 5
6. Реферат Робота станції Одеса-Застава 1
7. Реферат Дыхательные методики
8. Курсовая Внебюджетные фонды 10
9. Курсовая на тему Формування правової свідомості учнів
10. Курсовая Понятие и виды неоконченной преступной деятельности