Catch-22

by

Joseph Heller

Catch-22: Irony 6 key examples

Definition of Irony
Irony is a literary device or event in which how things seem to be is in fact very different from how they actually are. If this seems like a loose definition... read full definition
Irony is a literary device or event in which how things seem to be is in fact very different from how they actually are. If this... read full definition
Irony is a literary device or event in which how things seem to be is in fact very different from how... read full definition
Irony
Explanation and Analysis—Fake Friends:

There are many instances in Catch-22 of irony on a small scale: Heller's novel is full of contradictions, paradoxes, and oxymorons. But there are also situational ironies, contradicting consequences of the strange circumstances in which the soldiers find themselves. Perhaps the most overarching and significant instance of this type of irony in the novel is the case of Yossarian's friends.

Yossarian counts several of the other soldiers on Pianosa as his friends, including Doc Daneeka, Orr, and Nately, and, to a certain extent, Chaplain Tappman. But, ironically, all of these characters, despite being at least nominally Yossarian's friends, do nothing to help him, if not actively hurt him. This is not merely a situation of these men being bad friends; instead, they at once claim to be his friend and yet do badly by him. This reversal makes an ironic situation.

This irony occurs in different ways for the different characters. Early in the novel the narrator notes that "Doc Daneeka was Yossarian's friend and would do just about nothing in his power to help him." Despite being Yossarian's friend and the company's flight surgeon, a supposedly altruistic profession, Daneeka's sole interest is his own welfare, both for his money and his life.

Orr is, in Yossarian's view, too stupid to be any help to him; Yossarian calls him a "simple-minded gnome." But, in an extension of the irony, Orr is the only pilot shown to be smart enough to escape the war, through an elaborate plot involving faking his own death by apparently crashing his plane into the sea.

Nately's extreme family wealth makes him detached from everyone, including Yossarian. He had only joined the war because his family told him to and never thought he would fight. Nately indirectly causes great harm to Yossarian: after Nately's death in a battle, his "whore" blames Yossarian, and she spends the remainder of the book trying to murder him, leading to his serious injury.

 Yossarian's friends, who ought to be on his side, all either hurt him or are unable to help him. This is a pervasive irony of the novel, a contradiction brought about by the fact that all the soldiers are forced to fight. In other words, Catch-22, which traps all the pilots into the fight, leads to this irony of Yossarian's fickle friends.

Chapter 3: Havermeyer
Explanation and Analysis—Started from the Top:

When the narrator introduces Colonel Cargill to the reader, his description is one of the earliest, and most extensive, uses of Heller's characteristic ironic style. The verbal irony is extensive:

His services were much sought after by firms eager to establish losses for tax purposes. [...] He had to start at the top and work his way down, and with sympathetic friends in Washington, losing money was no simple matter. It took months of hard work and careful misplanning. A person misplaced, disorganized, miscalculated, overlooked everything and opened every loophole, and just when he thought he had it made, the government gave him a lake or a forest or an oilfield and spoiled everything. Even with such handicaps, Colonel Cargill could be relied on to run the most prosperous enterprise into the ground. He was a self-made man who owed his lack of success to nobody.

The jokes come again and again. "He had to start at the top and work his way down" reverses the standard phrase in which a businessman starts at the bottom and works his way up. The final sentence is more verbal irony: he was a "self-made man" but the thing that he made was his "lack of success."

In addition to the verbal irony, there is also the situational irony of Cargill's career. Most of the time, in a capitalist economy, marketers like him are hired in order to make more money. Cargill, instead, gets hired to run businesses into the ground.

This description of Cargill, like all the ironic situations and characterizations in Catch-22, is meant to create a tone of illogic and absurdity, as part of Heller's satirical critique of the war effort. This instance also serves as an anticapitalist critique from Heller. The irony relies on the fact that it is good, under the capitalist system, to make more money, not less. By the structure of this irony, Heller casts doubt on the goodness of the American economic system, just as he attempts to undermine the logic of the American war effort.

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Chapter 26: Aarfy
Explanation and Analysis—A Fortiori:

Dunbar and Yossarian have both sustained injuries and, in Chapter 26, are back in the hospital. They would both prefer to lie next to each other, so they move from bed to bed, impersonating other patients. Both Yossarian and Dunbar, at various points, pretend to be a patient called Anthony E. Fortiori, who himself has been swapping beds as well. (He is in the hospital, according to the doctors, with a stone in one of his salivary glands, but if he is anything like Yossarian, that injury is likely fake.)

In the scene, this soldier is usually referred to by the narrator as A. Fortiori. The narrator, Yossarian, and Dunbar refer to him by that name many times; it is Heller's style to use the same joke over and over till it becomes benign. This name is a play on the Latin phrase argumentum a fortiori, literally "argument by the stronger (reason)." The phrase refers to an argument made upon the basis of another, stronger argument. For example, if a man is dead, one can make an argumentum a fortiori that the man is not breathing. The term is often used in technical logical arguments in mathematics, law, and rhetoric.

By referring to Anthony E. Fortiori as A. Fortiori, Heller is making several subtle jokes. A fortiori, on its own, means "by strength." A. Fortiori is shown to enjoy using his own strength to scare younger, lower-ranked soldiers and to kick them out of their beds so he can lie there instead. But his name also becomes an irony once Yossarian lies in A. Fortiori's bed, later in the scene. It would be an argumentum a fortiori that if a hospital bed is assigned to a certain patient, then if a person is lying in that bed, the person probably is that patient. So when Yossarian lies in his bed, the argumentum a fortiori for A. Fortiori is incorrect. This reversal of expectations is ironic.

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Explanation and Analysis—Split Personality:

In Chapter 26, after Yossarian's first injury in Rome, he and Dunbar move from bed to bed in the hospital, impersonating other patients, in order to continue lying next to each other. After earlier impersonating Dunbar to Major Sanderson, Yossarian finds himself in the bed of a man named Fortiori. Sanderson, frustrated and believing that Yossarian really is Fortiori, wants the man in front of him to stop the nonsense. In Sanderson's scolding, there is an instance of dramatic irony:

You'd better get a grip on yourself before it's too late. First you're Dunbar. Now you're Yossarian. The next thing you know you'll be claiming you're Washington Irving. Do you know what's wrong with you? You've got a split personality.

Dramatic irony is when the audience knows something certain characters in the scene do not know. Here, the audience, having read the first 350 pages of the book, knows that Yossarian has already called himself Washington Irving while he was censoring letters and will continue to refer to Irving throughout the novel. (Washington Irving was an American biographer and short-story writer who flourished in the early 19th century; he is known for the stories "Rip Van Winkle" and "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.") This dramatic irony continues later in the same chapter, when the narrator notes that the CID men were "after a forger named Washington Irving" and continues through subsequent scenes. This links, notably, with a larger theme in the novel of a lack of literacy among the officers.

This is a quite different type of irony than the type that Heller tends to use much more extensively throughout the novel: that is, situational irony, in which there are indications that a character will act in a certain way, and then they act in a different way. Those sort of contradictions are fundamental to the illogical structure of the novel. The dramatic irony in the quote above, though, is also characteristic of Heller's novel. The non-linear timeline and abundance of characters leads naturally to these moments of dramatic irony.

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Chapter 35: Milo the Militant
Explanation and Analysis—Distinctions:

Milo's two-timing business dealings, described in Chapter 35, are the subject of another one of Heller's contradictory, ironical constructions:

Milo had been earning many distinctions for himself. He had flown fearlessly into danger and criticism by selling petroleum and ball bearings to Germany at good prices in order to make a good profit and help maintain a balance of power between the contending forces. [...] With a devotion to purpose above and beyond the line of duty, he then raised the price of food in his mess halls so high that all officers and enlisted men had to turn over all their pay to him in order to eat.

This construction is fairly standard for Heller contradictions: Milo is "praised" for these immoral acts. At this late point in the book, after so many different instances of contradictions, ironies, and paradoxes, the reader feels another layer of the absurdity of warfare in how repetitive these constructions become. But even these constructions begin to become odd and absurd as they are repeated so many times. This gives another layer to Heller's depiction of the war: not only does it not make sense, but it is boring and repetitive.

Heller, in this ironic description of Milo, parodies standard military honorifics. Milo "earns distinctions" for a "devotion to purpose above and beyond the line of duty" in stealing from his peers; he had "flown fearlessly into danger and criticism." These sort of phrases of distinction are rare in the novel (there are few admirable soldiers or officers), so when they are used here ironically, they are yet more effective. Later on the same page, the narrator uses an economic comparison rather than a military one, to make one last ironic picture of the two-timing salesman: "Milo had been caught red-handed in the act of plundering his countrymen, and, as a result, his stock had never been higher."

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Chapter 41: Snowden
Explanation and Analysis—Ether Too:

As Yossarian lies in bed, nearly dying, in Chapter 41, Heller depicts his strange situation using rich, complex, multi-sensory imagery:

Yossarian played dead with his eyes shut while the clerk admitted him by shuffling some papers, and then he was rolled away slowly into a stuffy, dark room with searing spotlights overhead in which the cloying smell of formaldehyde and sweet alcohol was even stronger. The pleasant, permeating stink was intoxicating. He smelled ether too and heard glass tinkling. He listened with secret, egotistical mirth to the husky breathing of the two doctors. It delighted him that they thought he was unconscious and did not know he was listening.

It is a well-known scientific phenomenon that when one of the body's senses is cut off, the other senses become more strongly perceptive. Yossarian is certainly experiencing this feeling. Lying with his eyes closed, he hears acutely the sound of shuffling papers and the doctors' "husky breathing." He feels the heat of the "searing lights": a tactile sense. He smells formaldehyde so "cloyingly" he can probably taste it. With such sensuous imagery, the reader cannot help but feel as if they are lying in the hospital bed like Yossarian.

But Heller, characteristically, couches this imagery within an ironic situation. In a moment in which Yossarian is supremely conscious, and doing everything he can to use his remaining senses, he appears entirely unconscious. Indeed Heller takes the irony to the extreme: Yossarian "played dead," while he is as alive to his surroundings as possible. Yossarian is "delighted" by this situation. He is so happy largely because, by this point in the book, he hates these doctors (one of whom says "Let's jab our thumbs down inside his wound and gouge it") and everything associated with the military.

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