Aspects of Minor Literature in Kurt Vonnegut’s Sirens of Titan, Slapstick, or Lonesome No More! and Cat's Cradle
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University of Tlemcen
Abstract
The works of American author Kurt Vonnegut are a self-conscious science fiction
that attract attention to the untruthful discourses building the modern world. His
novels Slapstick, or Lonesome no More!, Cat’s Cradle, and Sirens of Titan are
scientific dystopias that depict helpless individuals who feel subjugated by their
cultures. They belong to discourses that do not represent them and suffer self-delusion
and lack of love as they try to find meaning. His characters make his works into a
minority literature, based on the model of French philosophers Gilles Deleuze and
Felix Guattari, in their book Kafka, Toward a Minor Literature. The model that is
based on three main aspects which are: Language deterritorialization, politicization,
and collective value, is embodied in Vonnegut’s three works through techniques like
estrangement and transgression in the dystopian science fiction text, social
judgement, political despotism, the power of science, and finally experimental
writing techniques like metafiction, language defamiliarization, the invention of a
new language to highlight the language deterritorialization and transgression