Player Piano

by

Kurt Vonnegut

Player Piano: Chapter 5 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
At the Country Club, eager young engineers enthusiastically greet Paul and Anita. Kroner greets Paul in a way that makes him feel like a child, but Paul always feels this way around Kroner—possibly because Kroner was best friends with Paul’s father. Baer, on the other hand, babbles on and on. He’s an extremely excitable man who is, despite his casual demeanor, the most skilled engineer in the entire Eastern Division. Kroner and Baer are inseparable: Baer contains a wealth of knowledge about technology, and Kroner provides unfailing faith in the company and its objectives.
This dinner at the Country Club sheds light on the power dynamics that exist in Paul’s corporate life. The young engineers, for example, are anxious to greet Paul because they know he’s important, so they’re just trying to look good. Kroner, on the other hand, occupies an even more powerful position—one that makes Paul feel insignificant and childish. Baer, for his part, talks so extensively that it’s hard to believe he’s actually trying to connect with anyone. In fact, it doesn’t seem like there’s any true camaraderie in this environment all, suggesting that the corporate world in which Paul lives is full of superficial relationships.
Themes
Corporate Life vs. Human Connection Theme Icon
Baer lets slip that he and Kroner heard Paul was having trouble with his “nerves.” Paul denies this, and when Anita asks who made this claim, Bear blurts out that it was Doctor Shepherd, though Kroner quickly insists that Baer must be mistaken: according to Kroner, Shepherd said no such thing. Shepherd is standing nearby, and the back of his neck goes bright red when he hears this conversation. He discreetly slips out of the Country Club and onto the golf course. 
This awkward moment confirms a suspicion Paul had earlier in the day: namely, that Shepherd had called out sick in order to meet with people like Kroner in an attempt to get transferred out from under Paul. Paul and Shepherd started working at Ilium Works at the same time, collaborating on projects like the one they completed with Rudy Hertz. Now, though, it’s clear that Shepherd’s competitive spirit has overtaken any kind of friendship they may have had—a sign that Paul’s work environment breeds competition and rivalry instead of friendship and kindness.
Themes
Class Division and Competition Theme Icon
Corporate Life vs. Human Connection Theme Icon
A group of young engineers stands in front of Paul. Their leader, Paul Berringer, isn’t very intelligent, but he comes from a wealthy family and is the son of a well-respected engineer. Berringer challenges Paul to a game of checkers after dinner, which is a yearly tradition. Paul is the reigning checker champion of Ilium, and each year a different young engineer thinks he can beat him and take away the title. Kroner and Baer love this competitive spirit, so Paul indulges it. This year, though, he can tell things will be a little different, since Berringer says that he won’t really be playing alone against Paul. Still, Paul remains confident and accepts the challenge.
The mere fact that there’s a checker championship among the employees of the Ilium Works reveals the company’s competitive spirit. This is a place, it seems, that incentivizes rivalry, creating an environment in which people are encouraged to work against each other. Once again, then, the corporate world lacks the kind of camaraderie and fellow-feeling that people like Finnerty yearn for (as evidenced by his attempt to commiserate with Paul about how unhappy he is at his job).
Themes
Happiness, Self-Worth, and Passion Theme Icon
Class Division and Competition Theme Icon
Corporate Life vs. Human Connection Theme Icon
Seated at the dinner table, there are 27 managers and engineers. There are also two empty places belonging to Finnerty and Shepherd. Paul is disappointed in his reunion with Finnerty and hopes he doesn’t see him for a while. He’s not sure what he thought he’d get out of seeing his old friend, but he thought maybe Finnerty would help him get rid of the “nameless, aching need” that has been distracting him at work—just as Shepherd apparently reported to Kroner
It’s not exactly clear what the “nameless, aching need” inside Paul actually is, other than a general desire to lead a more fulfilling life. What that life would actually look like, though, is unknown. He hoped Finnerty would help him forget about this feeling, but Finnerty did the exact opposite: he validated Paul’s unhappiness. Instead of helping his friend forget about his woes, Finnerty tried to get Paul to see that his unhappiness in the corporate world is completely understandable. However, Paul isn’t ready to accept this, which is why he now hopes he won’t see Finnerty for a while. In other words, Finnerty struck a nerve in Paul, but Paul isn’t ready to admit that he doesn’t like his current life. As a result, he wants to distance himself from Finnerty.
Themes
Happiness, Self-Worth, and Passion Theme Icon
Corporate Life vs. Human Connection Theme Icon
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Paul isn’t mad at Shepherd. In fact, he even gets up from the dinner table to go find him, hoping to lure him back to the party. Following him onto the golf course, Anita begs Paul to turn around, since she thinks he should let Shepherd suffer. After all, Shepherd clearly told Kroner and Baer about Paul’s nerves in an attempt to undermine him and secure the Pittsburgh job for himself. Thus, Anita thinks Paul should let Shepherd worry for a while, wanting him to think Paul might fire him for what he’s done. Instead, Paul politely tries to coax him back to the Club. 
Again, Anita is more invested in Paul’s career than Paul himself. Rather than punishing Shepherd for going behind his back, Paul wants to treat him with kindness, suggesting that he cares more about treating people well than he cares about his own job. Shepherd and Anita, on the other hand, are more interested in status and power than human relationships.
Themes
Class Division and Competition Theme Icon
Corporate Life vs. Human Connection Theme Icon
Shepherd seems to want Paul to be mad, but Paul refuses to get wrapped up in a big ordeal—this would only play into Shepherd’s love of competition. Finally, he convinces Shepherd to head back to the party, though Shepherd refuses to shake Paul’s hand. When Anita angrily tells him not to gossip about Paul’s health, Shepherd says that everyone knows perfectly well that he’s right: Paul can’t be trusted with even the simplest machines, let alone the important Pittsburgh job.
Shepherd confirms in this moment that he wants the Pittsburgh job for himself. He wants it so badly, in fact, that he’s willing to go behind Paul’s back—even though Paul himself treats him with nothing but kindness. Although Paul takes this entire ordeal in stride, it’s a clear reminder that he exists in a cutthroat atmosphere, and this is one possible reason he’s so dissatisfied with his life as a manager.
Themes
Happiness, Self-Worth, and Passion Theme Icon
Class Division and Competition Theme Icon
Corporate Life vs. Human Connection Theme Icon
Back in the Country Club, Shepherd claims to feel a little sick. To ease the tension, Kroner plays into this obvious lie, asking the waiters to bring him some toast to make him feel better. At the end of the meal, Paul gives his speech, in which he talks about the Second Industrial Revolution and generally states the importance of what the industry is doing. Machines, he argues, are working much better than actual workers ever could. The products are better, cheaper, and more widely available—an observation everyone makes whenever they have to give a speech about Ilium Works. 
At this point in the novel, Paul still seems to believe in the value of automation. However, the fact that the speech he gives is basically the same speech everyone gives when they talk about Ilium Works suggests that he’s not all that invested in these ideas. Although he might genuinely believe machines make better products than human laborers, he isn’t interested in this idea quite enough to come up with something original to say about it—in fact, he even admitted to Katharine that his point about the Industrial Revolution was borrowed from something a famous intellectual said many years ago. Simply put, he’s just going through the motions of corporate life, waxing poetic about the benefits of automation without really caring about his job as much as people like Kroner or Shepherd.
Themes
Technology and Progress Theme Icon
Happiness, Self-Worth, and Passion Theme Icon
Kroner raises his hand and points out that one horsepower does the work of roughly 22 laborers. This, he says, means that some of the company’s large machines can accomplish more than the whole population of enslaved people accomplished before the American Civil War. Plus, these machines work at this fast pace around the clock.
Kroner is so focused on the idea of productivity that he ends up tacitly endorsing the practice of slavery. He doesn’t acknowledge that slavery was a terrible thing that deprived Black people of basic human rights. Instead, he fixates on how much enslaved people accomplished as workers, inadvertently implying that he understands—on some level—why powerful white businessmen would have wanted to enslave people in the first place. Of course, his main point is that people can put machines to work without having to feel bad about treating them poorly, but he never explicitly says this—so his comment comes off as callous, as if all he cares about is productivity.
Themes
Technology and Progress Theme Icon
Quotes
Paul takes this into consideration but points out that Kroner’s comparison mainly relates to the advancements made in the First Industrial Revolution, when machines simply replaced physical labor. Now, after the Second Industrial Revolution, it’s harder to measure progress because machines have also eased the “annoyance” and “boredom” people used to feel while working as manual laborers.
The First Industrial Revolution took place between 1760 and 1840. It was responsible for changing the manufacturing process, as new inventions made it easier (and faster) for workers to produce materials without expending large amounts of physical effort. The Second Industrial Revolution spanned from roughly 1870 to 1914 and largely built upon the progress of the First Industrial Revolution, using electrical power to make work even easier and faster. Paul’s general point is that, though it’s easy to measure how much physical work machines have spared human laborers, it’s harder to quantify the emotional burdens that automation has eased. The mere fact that he’s thinking about “annoyance” and “boredom” suggests that he’s attuned to the overall impact of mechanization on society, not just on the business-related effects of these machines. Kroner, on the other hand, only seems to care about productivity.
Themes
Technology and Progress Theme Icon
Happiness, Self-Worth, and Passion Theme Icon
Baer says that the benefits of the Second Industrial Revolution are measurable by simply counting the number of faulty products. Though this is true, Paul tries to approach the matter from the perspective of the workers. How, for instance, has the Second Industrial Revolution helped the people across the river? Everyone makes light of this, and Kroner jokes that those people never worked anyway. When Anita says they’re “reproducing like rabbits,” Finnerty drunkenly bursts into the room and says, “Somebody telling dirty jokes about rabbits reproducing?”
Baer’s point is that the “annoyance” and “boredom” people used to feel at work used to cause faults in the products. Paul himself made a similar point while talking to Katharine earlier in the day, saying that any minor problem—like a hangover or an argument with the boss—could easily affect a person’s work. Now, though, Paul is more interested in exploring how mechanization has impacted the people living in Homestead. The answer, of course, is that it has deprived them of jobs and generally made their lives worse, but nobody at the dinner wants to consider this—instead, they want to tell themselves that mechanization has led to a better world. It seems obvious that this isn’t true, since the people on the other side of the river don’t enjoy the same perks as managers and engineers. However, Kroner and everyone else at the dinner don’t recognize this because they don’t actually care about the people of Homestead—yet another sign of the stark class division that exists in Ilium.
Themes
Technology and Progress Theme Icon
Happiness, Self-Worth, and Passion Theme Icon
Class Division and Competition Theme Icon
Drunk and unmannerly, Finnerty sits by Kroner, who wants to talk about the Second Industrial Revolution. Kroner remarks on the proliferation of vacuum tubes (a source of power), but Finnerty points out that the rise in vacuum tubes has coincided with increased addiction and suicide. While Kroner blames the war for this, Finnerty thinks that if there’s even a small connection between technological advancement and human misery, it ought to be explored. Anita finally puts an end to the conversation, suggesting that they turn their attention to the checkers championship in the next room.
Whereas Paul still passively believes in the value of automation, Finnerty has completely given up on trying to convince himself that the proliferation of machines in the workplace has led to a better world. In fact, he thinks there’s evidence that it has done the opposite, arguing that there are observable ways in which mechanization has harmed society. This, it seems, is the answer to Paul’s question about how technological advancement has impacted people on the other side of the river: it has led to things like addiction and suicide. Because everyone at the dinner except Finnerty still believes in the value of mechanization, though, nobody’s willing to objectively consider the negative effects of all this progress.
Themes
Technology and Progress Theme Icon
Happiness, Self-Worth, and Passion Theme Icon
Quotes
Paul sits at the checker board, confident that he’ll win once again. However, he loses his confidence when Berringer and his friends wheel out a large, human-sized box called Checker Charley: a checker-playing machine designed by Berringer’s father. Paul tries to call the game off, insisting that he’ll never win against a machine, but Anita and the others convince him to go through with it just to be a good sport. Even Finnerty stumbles into the game room and, after inspecting Checker Charley with Baer at his side, tells Paul to play. In fact, he decides to bet money on the game, wagering that Paul will win against the machine. Berringer and Shepherd take him up on this bet. 
This checker game is a perfect representation of what has happened in this society: humans have been pitted against machines. Humans hardly stand a chance in the workforce, since machines are able to work more efficiently and with higher accuracy than most physical laborers. The difference here, though, is that checkers is a mental game, meaning that Paul faces the exact thing he told Katharine he fears: a future in which machines are better than humans at thinking.
Themes
Technology and Progress Theme Icon
Class Division and Competition Theme Icon
After several moves, Paul is surprised that he’s able to take one of Checker Charley’s pieces. He assumes this is because the machine is using an advanced strategy, but Checker Charley begins to make a strange, over-worked noise. Soon enough, Paul is winning handsomely, and Finnerty puts even more money on the bet. Paul is finally having fun, feeling quite satisfied that he’s beating the machine, which—to everyone’s surprise—starts smoking. “Fire!” yells Baer, and a waiter rushes in to douse the machine with a fire extinguisher. With a loud, terrible hum, Checker Charley dies, and everyone except Paul and Finnerty looks distraught, feeling terrible for Berringer and his father’s precious machine.
Machines are perfectly capable of replacing physical laborers, but they’re clearly not yet advanced enough to render human thought obsolete. This is comforting to Paul and Finnerty, both of whom are skeptical about the impact machines have had on society as a whole. Everyone else, though, is deeply committed to the idea of technological progress, so Checker Charley’s fiery demise upsets them—after all, this outcome suggests that machines haven’t come quite as far as people like Kroner would like to think.
Themes
Technology and Progress Theme Icon
Class Division and Competition Theme Icon
Beside himself, Berringer accuses Finnerty of tampering with Checker Charley before the game, when he inspected the machine’s backside. After all, how could Finnerty have been so confident that Paul would win? Because, Finnerty replies, he will always side with human beings over machines—plus, he saw that Checker Charley had a “loose connection.” Berringer shrieks that Finnerty should have said something, but Finnerty argues that Checker Charley, if he’s so incredible, should be able to fix himself.
Checker Charley’s loose connection illustrates that even machines are bound to make mistakes. Ironically, Checker Charley would have been fine if only someone had fixed the connection. This shows that human error can still make its way into the world of machinery, but it also emphasizes the importance of human oversight—after all, machines like Checker Charley can’t fix themselves!
Themes
Technology and Progress Theme Icon
On his way out the door, Finnerty congratulates Paul on his win, but Anita begs him to give Berringer and Shepherd their money back. She complains that it isn’t fair for Finnerty to keep their money. And then, much to everyone’s surprise, Paul loses control and starts laughing. This delights Finnerty, who announces that he’s headed back to Paul and Anita’s house for the night.
In this moment, Paul recognizes the absurdity of the corporate world, in which everyone is obsessed with productivity and the value of technological progress. The idea that Berringer and everyone else could be so upset about a malfunctioning machine emphasizes how obsessed they are with the promise of automation. Finnerty, on the other hand, recognizes that machines aren’t always something to celebrate (a viewpoint that Paul has apparently come to appreciate). On an even more basic level, Paul’s laughter suggests that he enjoys seeing his fellow managers and engineers get so flustered about something as ridiculous as a machine designed to play checkers. This, after all, is a good representation of how seriously Paul’s coworkers take the idea that machines have made the world a better place.
Themes
Technology and Progress Theme Icon
Happiness, Self-Worth, and Passion Theme Icon