Thursday, November 28, 2019
Catch 22 Essays (819 words) - Yossarian, Orr, Catch-22, Bombardier
  Catch 22    America has been involved in the cold war for years. The fear of communism is  ruining lives. The country moves closer and closer to the Korean war. Joseph    Heller's Catch 22 is published. 1963- College students are seen wearing army  fatigues with "Yossarian" name tags. Reports are being made about a    "Heller Cult". Bumper stickers are manufactured which read, "Better    Yossarian then Rotarian". The phrase "Catch 22" has surfaced meaning a"no win situation" it is now an excepted word in the English dictionary.    Such a dramatic change in opinion from the earlier, Pro-war society, it is  obvious that Catch 22 had some impact on the anti-war movement of the    1960's-1970's. Not to say the book was the one reason the movement started,    It was certainly a catalyst. A protest novel, Heller's story portrays the  absurdity of bureaucracy, the stupidity of war, and the power they both have to  crush the human spirit. Heller uses a war zone setting, to satirise society at  large. He compares the commanding officers to Incompetent businessmen.    "Don't mumble, and mumble "sir" when you do, and don't interrupt, and  say "sir" when you do." Desiring promotion over every thing else, Colonel    Cathcart keeps raising the number of missions the men of his squadron must fly.    Even though the army says they need fly only forty, a bureaucratic trap called    "Catch 22" says they can't go home at forty because they must obey their  commanding officers. Much like the work place, the men are forced to go through  endless amounts of red tape, which hardly gets them anywhere. Yossarian tries to  pretend he is crazy to get out of fighting. He signs "Washington Irving" on  letters he censors, and walks around naked for a couple of days. If someone is  crazy he needs only ask and he can be dismissed from duty. Yet, one would be  crazy to fly, and only a sane person would ask to stop, Yossarian is therefore  not crazy and is ordered to continue flying his missions. Heller also  demonstrates the effect war has on one's mind. All of the pilot's are coping  (except Yossarian) with the war in different ways...The daredevil pilot, McWatt,  loves to buzz his friend Yossarian's tent. Mess officer Milo Minderbender  turns his job into an international black-market food syndicate. Lead Bombardier    Havermeyer Zeros in on target's, no matter how much anti-aircraft peppers his  plane. Yet the most crazy are the people in charge. A feud between two generals  makes picture-perfect placement of bombs more important then actually hitting a  target. The general in command is a recluse who orders his aide to let people in  to see him only when he is out. The use of comparison is throughout the book,  furthering the theme of military ignorance. Besides businessmen, the commanding  officers act like insane gods, while Yossarian, is a sort of reluctant Achilles.    No matter what the officers throw at him, he keeps on living. He is paranoid  that his luck will someday run out. To drive home his ideas, Heller employs  satire. He uses humour to convey situations which are utterly horrible, allowing    Heller to poke fun at authority. . The reader can't help but be amused at the  fact that Yossarian's parachute was taken from him in exchange for a share in    Milo's franchise. Perhaps the most important aspect of the book, is the idea,  that individuality is more important then dying for ones country. "A second  ago you were stepping into college with your lungs full of fresh air. Today you  are an old man....... You're inches away from death every time you go on a  mission. How much older can you be at your age? A half minute before you were  stepping into high school, ....... only a fifth of a second before that you were  a small kid with a ten week summer vacation that lasted a hundred years and  still ended to soon. Zip! They go rocketing by so fast. How the hell else are  you ever going to slow down?" Yossarian does not believe in what he is  fighting for, he thinks it's all crazy, There is no point of him fighting, he  doesn't have a problem with anybody. This book questions the individual duties  a person has to their country. Should they die for their country, or should they  question the authority? Is something right, just because everybody says it is?    By asking these questions, Mr. Heller was able to appeal to the youth of that  day who were asking just the same questions.    
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