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    <title>'Vonnegut' - Tagged Articles - Inquiries Journal</title>
    <link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/keyword/vonnegut</link>
    <description>Inquiries Journal provides undergraduate and graduate students around the world a platform for the wide dissemination of academic work over a range of core disciplines.</description>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 23 May 2026 19:39:15 -0400</pubDate>
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				<title>Postmodernism in Vonnegut&#39;s &quot;Cat&#39;s Cradle&quot;</title>
				<link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/512/postmodernism-in-vonneguts-cats-cradle</link>
				<description>By Derek D. Miller - &amp;ldquo;No damn cat, and no damn cradle.&amp;rdquo; (Vonnegut 66). This quote encompasses the satiric postmodern themes of absolute truth in Vonnegut&amp;rsquo;s Cat&amp;rsquo;s Cradle. There are several significantly strong postmodern concepts Vonnegut brings into view in this novel. First is the idea of truth, which he satirizes though the religion Bokononism. Second, is the idea of progress and how society views that progress only betters mankind, and brings it good fortune. The third concept is the concept of absolute knowledge and the idea of attaining it through science and experimentation, which relates...</description>
				<pubDate>Thu, 14 Apr 2011 08:58 EDT</pubDate>
				<guid>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/512/postmodernism-in-vonneguts-cats-cradle</guid>
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				<title>Dealing with Time in an Autobiography</title>
				<link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/366/dealing-with-time-in-an-autobiography</link>
				<description>By Rebecca A. Demarest - It is a push on the part of the author to make sense of the &amp;ldquo;temporality,&amp;rdquo; the chaos of time which is their life and recollections. The author is faced with a monumental decision in portraying his past because, as Barrett John Mandel argues, &amp;ldquo;his present creates his past &amp;lsquo;by inspiring meaningless data with interpretation, direction, suggestiveness &amp;ndash; life. But as long as I live, my past is rooted in my present and springs to life with my present&amp;rsquo;&amp;rdquo; (Renza 271-272). Because of this connection between the past and present, &amp;ldquo;Temporal perspectives&amp;hellip...</description>
				<pubDate>Tue, 18 Jan 2011 10:48 EST</pubDate>
				<guid>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/366/dealing-with-time-in-an-autobiography</guid>
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				<title>Viewing Four Vonnegut Novels Through the Lens of Literary Criticism</title>
				<link>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/54/viewing-four-vonnegut-novels-through-the-lens-of-literary-criticism</link>
				<description>By Lindsay D. Clark - I like Kurt Vonnegut because he&amp;rsquo;s innovative and unique, his literary voice speaking out of a time period I love, when he &amp;ldquo;was actually helping to breathe life into a new genre&amp;mdash;modern, pop fiction,&amp;rdquo;[1] according to critic Tom Verde. Even though he himself isn&amp;rsquo;t a radical, and in fact most of his beliefs (according to him) stem from a childhood spent during the Great Depression, the unrest of the sixties and seventies allowed him not only liberation in what he could write about&amp;mdash;science in an age of dizzying technological advancement; religion, sex, and tradition...</description>
				<pubDate>Tue, 17 Nov 2009 05:55 EST</pubDate>
				<guid>http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/54/viewing-four-vonnegut-novels-through-the-lens-of-literary-criticism</guid>
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