"The barbershop quartet sang again. Billy was emotionally racked again. The experience was definitely associated with those four men and not what they sang... Billy was pulled apart inside."
~ Slaughterhouse-Five, page 175
So Billy has a major emotional breakdown during this chapter - the singing quartet reminds him of the bombing in Dresden, which is a very traumatic experience for Billy. This scene actually contradicts what I thought had been a theme in the beginning of the book and some theories on which I had speculated. At first, I thought that the book was about veterans being affected by war, but so that they were completely apathetic to death and destruction and depressing matters. Actually, the message is completely the opposite - veterans are the most sensitive to death and violence. They have actually experienced it and it negatively affects their mentalities for the rest of their lives. They know first-hand how much harm the violence causes, and they see the innocent civilians hurt by other people's arguments. The concept isn't apathy, but suppression of emotion or unhealthy methods of coping with negative memories and experiences.
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