
Originally Posted by
Viridis
Hello, all - this is my first post. Obviously it is aimed at those who have read the Joseph Heller novel.
As I stated in the topic line, this is probably the craziest interpretation of the novel. I've searched the internet to see if there was any other analysis like mine, but apparently I'm alone. Still, here it goes...
I have to present this right now as only a "what if..." commentary, as I don't feel I have enough evidence yet to really make this a strong thesis. While I was reading the novel, I was struck by the chapter in which Nately's whore tries to kill Yossarian repeatedly. The whole novel has an absurd, surreal quality to it, but this chapter seemed to go even farther. They push the woman out of a plane with a parachute in northern Italy, and in the next scene she's attacking Yossarian outside his tent on Pianosa. The impossibility of this chapter made me go back and rethink the novel, particularly Snowden.
When Snowden is fatally wounded, Dobbs seizes the controls of the plane, puts them in a dive back into the flack, and yells over the intercom "Help him! Help him!" When Yossarian asks, "Help who?" Dobbs replies, "Help the bombadier!" But Yossarian himself is the bombadier. Why did Heller add that confused shout of Dobbs? Yossarian makes his way to the back of the plane where he sees Snowden lying with a gaping wound in his thigh. Of course, the fatal wound is hidden by the flack jacket.
Now, later in the book we learn that Yossarian himself was wounded on another mission. Where was he wounded? In the upper thigh - the same area as Snowden. Hmmm. At Snowden's funeral, Yossarian is sitting naked in a tree; the chaplain sees him there but does not realize it is Yossarian. He thinks he is seeing a vision; he wonders if it is an angel, a ghost, or the dead man's soul.
Perhaps you're starting to see where I'm going with this. There are constant references to the dead man in Yossarian's tent. When Yossarian's new tent-mates at the end of the novel finally get rid of the dead man's belongings by simply throwing them out, Yossarian leaves the tent as well. When Yossarian is stabbed by Nately's whore and is rushed to the hospital, he starts to regain consciousness and smells formaldehyde - the main ingredient in embalming fluid.
Is it possible that there is a subtext to Heller's novel - a second level of meaning in which Yossarian actually is dead during much of the novel? There are some further hints of that possible reading. When Doc Daneeka officially "died" in McWatt's plane crash, he goes to have his temperature taken again by Pilchard and Wren. As always his temperature is too low (96.8), and they offer the theory that he is dead, that maybe he has been dead the entire time and they didn't realize it. Is this a hint to the reader to look at the novel this way? At another point, Orr says that Appleby has flies in his eyes, and that prevents him from seeing things as they really are. This introduces the idea that things may not be as they appear, and flies are traditionally associated with death.
This odd reading of the novel gives another meaning to the ending. Perhaps Yossarian's soul has a choice - to remain in the eternal city of man, full of vice, pain and death (see the chapter of that name, which refers literally to Rome) Orr (intentionally misspelled to make the reference to Yossarian's tent-mate) to escape to a better place, a paradise of sorts: Sweden. Just remove the "Sw" and you have a deeper meaning. Plus, we already have a reference to Eden earlier in the novel, again when Yossarian is in the tree at Snowden's funeral. When Milo climbs the tree to talk to Yossarian, he asks what kind of tree it is. Yossarian replies that it's the Tree of Life, and of the knowledge of good and evil, both of which were in the garden of Eden.
As I said, this is a lot of circumstantial evidence; I would need to reread the book and do more research to truly support it. Still, the idea intrigues me. I have a little more to say on the matter, such as the roles of Major ____ de Coverly as God and the old lecherous man in the brothel as the devil, but I'll add that when I work out the details more.
Please let me know if I'm completely crazy with this alternate reading.
P.S. This reading of the novel was influenced by the movie Jacob's Ladder, in which a soldier has to come to terms with the fact that he is actually dead.