Hubbry Logo
search
logo

List of Catch-22 characters

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

The following is a list of characters in the 1961 novel Catch-22 by Joseph Heller.

Significant characters

[edit]

Yossarian

[edit]

Captain John Yossarian is a fictional character in Joseph Heller's novel Catch-22 and its sequel Closing Time, and the protagonist of both books. In Catch-22, Yossarian is a 28-year-old Captain (later Major) and the bombardier of a North American B-25 Mitchell in the 256th Bombardment Squadron of the Army Air Forces, stationed on the small island of Pianosa off the Italian mainland during World War II. Yossarian's exploits are based on the experiences of the author; Heller was also a bombardier in the USAAF, stationed on an island off the coast of Italy during World War II. Yossarian is described as a tall, broad, Assyrian man, who frequently causes panic by starting rumors or orchestrating events that either keep him out of direct battle or somehow usurp authority. Examples of these exploits include poisoning the mess hall with bath soap, accepting an award while naked, and altering a map so a mission will be canceled.

Chaplain Tappman

[edit]

Tappman (also called R. O. Shipman in some editions) is a naïve Anabaptist minister from Kenosha, Wisconsin. As he is extremely timid and terrified of authority, the chaplain is tormented throughout the novel by his rude, manipulative, atheist assistant, Corporal Whitcomb. Easily intimidated by the cruelty of others, the Chaplain is a kind, gentle, and sensitive man who worries constantly about his wife and children at home. He is described as a man of 32 years of age with tan hair, brown eyes, and a narrow, pale face. His sister is a Master Sergeant in the Marines.

Colonel Cathcart

[edit]

A full colonel, Chuck Cathcart is a group commander at the USAAF base in Pianosa and is obsessed with becoming a general. As such, he does whatever it takes to please his superiors, in particular by repeatedly raising the number of missions in a tour of duty beyond norms. Ironically, this provokes no reaction from the generals, who are apathetic to the war efforts, but becomes the bane of Yossarian's and Hungry Joe's lives. He is a 36-year-old man with short graying curly hair, a tall yet beefy build, extremely pale skin, and a host of self-confidence issues. He is described as mildly conceited, and yet is found to be constantly comparing himself to others, often finding himself displeased with the conclusions he reaches. Cathcart is also obsessed with forging and maintaining a public image of extreme masculinity, most likely due to his apparent insecurity.

Doc Daneeka

[edit]

Dr. Dan Daneeka is the squadron flight surgeon and a friend of Yossarian. Doc Daneeka's main motivation is for his own welfare, whether that be making money or protecting his own life. He generally forgets his moral duty as a physician except in the most extreme of circumstances. Doc Daneeka resents the military, both for drafting him and for finding out he lied on his drafting papers. He is constantly terrified of being transferred to the far more dangerous Pacific theater. Afraid of flying, he often has himself falsely listed as being aboard flights; this practice comes back to bite him when McWatt crashes a plane Daneeka is supposedly aboard and he is pronounced dead.

Milo Minderbinder

[edit]

First Lieutenant Milo Minderbinder is the mess officer at the Pianosa USAAF base. He is a highly entrepreneurial black marketeer who becomes obsessed with expanding mess operations and trading goods for the profits of the syndicate (in which he and everyone else "has a share"). Milo is both a satire of the modern businessman and a living representation of capitalism, as he has no allegiance to any country, person, or principle unless it generates profit. Milo even begins contracting missions for the Germans, fighting on both sides in the battle at Orvieto and bombing his own squadron. He is capable of extreme feats of self-justification to the point of psychopathy.

Lieutenant Nately

[edit]

Nately's family originally enlisted him to serve in the USAAF, believing the war would be over by the time he finished his training and that he would mingle with "gentlemen." Therefore, Nately could gain the pride of enlisting without actually having to fight. Instead, he mingled with Yossarian and Dunbar, and was sent overseas. He lives in a tent with McWatt next to Havermeyer's tent. His most notable contribution in the book is his involvement with a whore, "Nately's Whore," who is for the most part uninterested in him until he saves her from a sleepless night with generals, thus giving her an opportunity to get some sleep. He is often filled with American optimism, shown by his desire to marry his whore and send her kid sister to a respected college in the United States. He is killed on a mission when Dobbs flies his plane into Nately's. Nately's Whore blames Yossarian and spends the rest of the book trying to murder him.

Orr

[edit]

A bomber pilot in the squadron who is continually being shot down and ditching in the sea. Described as "a warm-hearted, simple-minded gnome," Orr is the only person in the group considered to be crazier than his good friend Yossarian, with whom he shares a tent. Orr appears to take great joy in thoroughly confounding those around him by being completely nonsensical, though this later appears to have been deliberate. He is declared 'missing in action' halfway through the novel after another crash-landing in the Mediterranean, but it later transpires that he has intentionally rowed to neutral Sweden to escape the war. At this point, Yossarian realizes that Orr's constant crashes have been rehearsals for the escape plan, which inspires Yossarian to finally flee the army.

Snowden

[edit]

Snowden is a radio-gunner in Yossarian's crew. When their aircraft is hit by anti-aircraft fire and Snowden is hit, Yossarian bandages his visible leg wound, but misses a fatal wound hidden by his clothing. This incident is generally referred to in the novel as "the death over Avignon". Yossarian obsesses over Snowden's death and loses his nerve on account of it.

Captain Aardvark

[edit]

Captain Aardvark (called Aarfy) is the navigator in Yossarian's B-25 bomber (but only when Yossarian is flying in the lead ship – hence Aarfy's sporadic appearances in the air in the novel). He is oblivious to incoming flak, repeatedly gets lost on missions, and always smokes a pipe. Yossarian comments that Aarfy is just not intelligent enough to be afraid of the war. He befriends Nately in the hope of working for Nately's wealthy father after the war. Aarfy sees himself as moral and protects well-connected women from the sexual advances of other officers, but he ends up raping and murdering the innocent maid Michaela. When asked by Yossarian why he did not simply hire a prostitute, he repeats his common admonition that "Old Aarfy has never paid for it." He shows no remorse for these crimes until he begins to worry that he might be brought to justice for them.

Major Major Major Major

[edit]

The ineffectual squadron commander of the base in Pianosa, who was named Major Major Major by his father as a joke – passing up the lesser possibilities of "Drum Major, Minor Major, Sergeant Major, or C Sharp Major" – and was later made a Major by an IBM machine with a sense of humor. He is disliked by most of the enlisted men in Pianosa because he was promoted so suddenly, and he chooses to remain isolated from the other people at the base, letting Sergeant Towser handle the operations of the base. He doesn't allow people to see him in his office while he is in his office; they can only see him when he isn't there. He utilizes Yossarian's alias, Washington Irving, to shirk official document duties.

Lieutenant (later Colonel and eventually General) Scheisskopf

[edit]

Scheisskopf is the training unit commander for Yossarian and Clevinger, and takes a particular dislike to Clevinger. Even though Clevinger is just as serious about parades as Scheisskopf, and his ideas help the squadron win multiple parades, Scheisskopf still considers him a "wise guy", and someone that needs to be "brought down a peg or two." He is at constant odds with his wife's masochistic libido, as his severe love for parades leaves him too busy to pay any attention to her. Scheisskopf is an ambitious and humorless man who is absolutely in love with war and is only happy in life when the opposing side is losing.

Other characters

[edit]
  • Appleby – A fair-haired young pilot from Iowa. He is described as being "as good at shooting craps as he was at playing ping-pong, and he was as good at playing ping-pong as he was at everything else." Appleby's character appears to represent those who thrive to a certain extent within a bureaucratic system and feel threatened by others who do not play along as much as they would like them to. He follows regulations without question and does everything he is supposed to do, managing to succeed with minimal effort at whatever he does. He believes in God, the Motherhood, and the American Way of Life.
  • Captain Black – The squadron's intelligence officer. Because of the lack of risk involved in not flying missions, Captain Black wanted to take over Major Duluth's position as squadron commander when the Major was killed over Perugia. He was thwarted in this by the appointment of Major Major to the position. Captain Black constantly mocks his fellow countrymen at the Pianosa airbase when they are faced by dangerous missions by telling them to "eat your liver." Since he is the camp's intelligence officer, he is not on combat duty and can therefore maintain his gleeful attitude to the men risking their lives in the air. Black is a paranoid anti-Communist and pressures all the men to take loyalty oaths, but out of personal spite prevents Major Major from taking one. He deliberately seeks out Nately's Whore on his visits to Rome and brags about their trysts to Nately.
  • Colonel Cargill – Before the war, Cargill was a successful, though completely untalented, marketing executive who was well known for being completely terrible at his job. In the Air Force, Colonel Cargill provided his legendary lack of skills as General Peckem's troubleshooter.
  • Clevinger – A highly principled, highly educated man who acts as Yossarian's foil within the story. He is a Harvard graduate whom Yossarian characterises as having "lots of intelligence but zero brains". Clevinger is very unmoving in his own opinions and is further described as such: excessively philosophical, politically a humanitarian, lacking in social tact, and a person of all facts but no passion. His optimistic view of the world causes Yossarian to consider him to be a "dope," and he and Yossarian each believe the other to be crazy. Yossarian also comments that Clevinger crusades against bigotry by balking in its face, proving Clevinger to be an extremely submissive character. During cadets course he is brought to trial and found guilty on phony charges by Lt. Scheisskopf. His plane mysteriously vanishes in a cloud and he's never seen again.
  • Lieutenant Coombs – The previous assistant intelligence officer. He dies in the same plane crash that kills Kraft.
  • Nurse Cramer – Nurse Duckett's best friend. She is a shapely, pretty, young girl who refuses to have any relations with the men at all, so Yossarian dislikes her. After Nurse Duckett starts a relationship with Yossarian, puritanical Nurse Cramer stops speaking to her.
  • Major Danby – The fighting group operations officer. An intellectual college professor with a passive and somewhat melancholic yet serene outlook on life who sees himself as a poor match for the armed services due to his lack of aggression. He briefs the airmen on upcoming missions and often acts as a mediator for disputes between enlisted men and as a confidant to most of the officers.
  • Mrs. Daneeka – Doc Daneeka's wife. When the doctor is mistakenly declared dead after listing himself fraudulently on a flight manifest for a doomed flight, she finds herself suddenly widowed and rich, and moves away, leaving no forwarding address.
  • Major de Coverley – Major de Coverley has a terrifying visage in the Biblical tradition, such that men will do his desires without his even saying a word. No one dares ask his first name, and the exact nature of the Major's duties within the bomber group is uncertain. He is Major Major's executive officer, but at the squadron base in Pianosa his only official duties are pitching horseshoes, renting apartments for the soldiers on rest leave, and kidnapping Italian laborers to help around the base. He also rapidly put an end to Captain Black's "Glorious Loyalty Oath Crusade" by demanding “gimme eat” then demanding that they “give everybody eat”. His frequent appearance during the fall of major cities makes him an object of interest to intelligence agencies on both sides, neither of which can identify him.
  • General Dreedle – The commander of the USAAF base in Pianosa, Dreedle is a blunt and ill-tempered man. He is an archetypal no-nonsense military man who does not care what the men under his command do as long as they fight and die unquestioningly when given orders. Despite this, he is generally apathetic to the war effort (having lost all drive after he was made General and he found he had "nothing more to aim for") and now mostly busies himself with harassing his son-in-law, Colonel Moodus. He despises Moodus simply because he hates weddings and does not wish to attend another one. His arch-rival is General Peckem, head of Special Services in Rome; the two men frequently have their disputes mediated without their knowledge by the desk clerk, ex-P.F.C. Wintergreen.
  • Dobbs – Originally a healthy young man, the effects of excessive combat missions have shot Dobbs' nerves, and when the narration of the book begins he is emotionally unstable and physically spent. He is described as being one of the worst pilots in the corps and his mid-air panic leads him to snatch the controls of the plane away from Huple, leading to the death of Snowden. He plots to kill Colonel Cathcart but will only do it if Yossarian tells him it's a good idea, which Yossarian never does. He shares a tent with Kid Sampson. He accidentally collides with Nately's plane, killing both crews.
  • Nurse Sue Ann Duckett – At the start of the novel Nurse Duckett does not like Yossarian; later, she has a relationship with him, jeopardizing her friendship with Nurse Cramer. She breaks off her affair with Yossarian when she decides to marry a doctor, and realizes she should not jeopardize her chances by carrying on openly with Yossarian.
  • First Lieutenant Dunbar – An airman and fellow bombardier stationed at the same base as Yossarian, on the island of Pianosa. He and Yossarian seem to have similar personalities, and so they make fast friends. Like Yossarian, Dunbar's chief goal is to prolong his life to whatever extent possible, often by cultivating boredom. He frequently accompanies Yossarian in the hospital, faking injuries to stay out of combat like his friend does. He is later 'disappeared' by the army when he becomes rebellious and unstable.
  • Major Duluth – The previous squadron commander. He was killed over Perugia.
  • Dori Duz – Scheisskopf's wife's close friend. A lively “tart” who has relations with all the men in the company once as she refuses to sleep with anyone she finds to be mediocre again. Thus, she sleeps with Yossarian once and he spends a small part of the novel pining after her since he knows she doesn't want him.
  • Second Lieutenant Anthony F. Fortiori - A patient staying in the same hospital where Yossarian is being treated for his leg wound for having a stone in his Salivary gland. He is easily pushed around by both Dunbar and Yossarian, who pull rank on him. Due to Major Sanderson getting Fortiori's official army record instead of Yossarian's, he is sent home instead.
  • Captain Flume – Captain Flume is the squadron's public relations officer, until he moves out of the trailer he shares with Chief White Halfoat after Halfoat jokingly threatens to slit Flume's throat open from ear to ear. He spends most of the book living like a hermit in the woods, which gradually drives him insane. By the end of the novel, Flume moves back into the trailer he shared with Halfoat after the latter starts dying of pneumonia.
  • Giuseppe (the soldier who sees everything twice) – A delirious soldier who creates a panic in the hospital by shouting, "I see everything twice!" Yossarian imitates him (by seeing two fingers regardless of whether a doctor holds up one, two, or none) and later impersonates him when he dies. The soldier's family does not notice that Yossarian is not their son.
  • Gus and Wes – Doc Daneeka's two orderlies, whose main activity is to paint airmen's gums and toes purple with gentian violet solution. They are extremely efficient and have a list of steps on determining if someone is sick so that there will be certainty when diagnosing. Daneeka hates them because they refuse to declare him ill so that he can go home.
  • Captain Havermeyer – Havermeyer lives in the tent next to Yossarian's, and according to Colonel Cathcart he is "the best damn bombardier we've got." This was because he insists on flying his plane dead straight to, over, and past the target despite any anti-aircraft fire he receives. Yossarian despises him because of his insistence in putting his (Yossarian's) life at stake. He is also slightly unstable and enjoys shooting mice at night with the gun he stole from the dead man in Yossarian's tent. However, despite their love of duty, even Havermeyer begins to hate the constant raising of the number of missions. By the end he also reveals his main ambitions, to not embarrass his wife and kid and to join the reserves after the war.
  • Huple – A fifteen-year-old pilot who lied about his age to get into the Army. He shares a tent with Hungry Joe on the wrong side of the railway tracks and is shy and nervous, but is a thoroughly idealistic patriot, which is why Yossarian feels sorry for him; he feels he'll probably die too young. He has a cat that constantly sleeps on Hungry Joe's face. He owns a wristwatch that Hungry Joe forces him to keep in a sock. He is the pilot flying when Snowden dies over Avignon.
  • Hungry Joe – A perverted soldier who is noted for constantly trying to photograph women nude, claiming to be a photographer for Life magazine (which, ironically, he was before the war, although none of his pictures developed correctly). He is the only pilot who consistently finished the required number of missions (but was forced to continue flying as his paperwork was always delayed until the flight limit was elevated) and has screaming nightmares until he's ordered back onto combat status. He is constantly triggered by loud or sudden noises, making Huple keep his watch in a sock due to the constant ticking and getting startled when McWatt purposefully snaps his cards. He enjoys randomly choosing diseases to worry about at will. He dies when he's suffocated by Huple's cat.
  • Sergeant William Knight – The turret gunner on Yossarian's plane; he accidentally begins a panic prior to the Bologna operation when he brings extra flak jackets, causing everyone to think the target is deadly. His name is given as William in the sequel Closing Time.
  • Corporal Kolodny – Captain Black's despised assistant. He erroneously reports that Bologna has been captured by the Allies after Yossarian surreptitiously redraws the lines on the battle map. Kolodny is forced to sign hundreds of loyalty oaths in Black's name each day. During a Thanksgiving party, he drunkenly shoots himself in the leg while playing with his pistol.
  • Lieutenant Colonel Korn – Colonel Cathcart's intellectual assistant and right-hand man. Korn appears alongside Cathcart throughout the novel and it becomes clear to the reader that Korn does most of the thinking and most of the work for Cathcart, who only takes the credit. Korn is portrayed as much more relaxed and less ostentatious than his superior, but much more sadistic and cynical. Much like Cathcart he has ambitions for higher military ranks but chooses to be below Cathcart and remain outside the limelight so that, if something goes wrong, Cathcart will take the fall instead of him. Korn is described as a bald stocky, dark, flaccid man with a shapeless paunch, who wears rimless spectacles.
  • Kraft – A man killed at the bombing of a bridge at Ferrara. Yossarian blames himself, as he ordered the planes back after they missed the first time. He was a skinny, harmless kid from Pennsylvania who only wanted to be liked. It is later revealed that his death was actually Aarfy's fault because he didn't accurately navigate them.
  • Luciana – A woman whom Yossarian briefly dates in Rome and whom he spends a great deal of the second half of the book looking for, without success. She refuses to marry Yossarian because she believes he's crazy for wanting to marry her at all.
  • McWatt – The pilot of Yossarian's plane, one of his closest friends and Nately's roommate as well. A young man who appears to be very calm and serene and whom Yossarian considers to be crazy because he remains sane during the war. He enjoys flying his plane low to scare Yossarian, which eventually leads to Yossarian choking him and threatening to murder him during one of their combat training sessions. After this, McWatt is sympathetic towards Yossarian and seems to realize that Yossarian might actually be going insane. McWatt accidentally kills Kid Sampson when flying too low and slicing him in half with a plane propeller, driving him to commit suicide by crashing his plane into a mountain.
  • Major Metcalf – One of the judges presiding over the Action Board during Clevinger's trial. He is extremely cowardly and strongly resembles Clevinger in many ways, inevitably leading to him being shipped away as well at the end of the trial.
  • Michaela – The poor, plain, simple-minded, hard-working young maid who works in the apartments where Yossarian and his unit stay while in Rome. She is a sweet and innocent girl who doesn't speak English and whom the enlisted men mostly leave alone, except when they mock her in English so she can't understand them. She is raped and murdered by Aarfy, who simply dismisses the murder as inconsequential because he's "good old Aarfy, who never pays for it".
  • Colonel Moodus – General Dreedle's son-in-law, whom the general hates and constantly tries to harass and have demoted. Moodus thinks Dreedle is a know-it-all that cannot take criticism. He is the only colonel that Cathcart trusts. He is also depicted as slightly heroic, correcting his father-in-law when the aforementioned ordered for Major Danby's execution, when even Cathcart and Korn wouldn't.
  • Lieutenant Mudd – More frequently referred to as "the dead man in Yossarian's tent," Mudd was killed in action before officially joining the squadron. Due to the bureaucratic uncertainty over the status of Mudd, no one will accept responsibility for Mudd and his belongings, and Sergeant Towser refuses to accept the man existed at all.
  • Colonel Nevers – The colonel who held Cathcart's position before he was killed on Yossarian's 23rd mission.
  • General P. P. Peckem – A pompous, pretentious and highly delusional general who desperately wants to take over General Dreedle's post as the superior commanding officer of Pianosa. Because of this ambition, he has a vicious rivalry with Dreedle and constantly tries to undermine him and have him demoted. His attempts are mostly thwarted without his knowledge by desk clerk ex-P.F.C. Wintergreen, who enjoys making Peckem look foolish.
  • Piltchard and Wren – Two captains in charge of squadron operations that are always mentioned in tandem and are in charge of organizing combat crews for missions. They are sympathetic towards Yossarian, despite his desire to avoid missions. Both are described as mild, soft-spoken men who are average in pretty much every aspect and yet love flying and so they assign themselves to every single mission.
  • Corporal Popinjay – The clerk present at Clevinger's trial; he is imprisoned for being too specific in his shorthand.
  • Lieutenant Kid Sampson – A young soldier described as having "...an angular, comical face with arched eyebrows and a scrawny blond mustache". He is killed by the propeller of McWatt's airplane. The event drives McWatt to suicide which in turn causes Doc Daneeka's bureaucratic "death". He shares a tent with Dobbs.
  • Major Sanderson – A neurotic psychiatrist who is convinced that Yossarian is mentally unstable because he acts rationally.
  • Mrs. Scheisskopf – Scheisskopf is always too busy planning parades to fulfill his wife's masochistic sexual fantasies. Instead, she sleeps with Scheisskopf's cadets, so they can all get revenge on her husband and she can get back at him for the lack of attention. She purports to be atheist but is actually a devout believer.
  • Sammy Singer – The tailgunner on Yossarian's bomber when Snowden dies. While he is just a minor character in Catch-22, he becomes one of the main characters in the sequel, Closing Time.
  • Corporal Snark – The mess sergeant before Milo Minderbinder. He was demoted for purposely poisoning sweet potatoes with soap chips, giving the squadron diarrhea, which he did at Yossarian's request. Snark is now referred to as Milo's "first chef". He is described as "...an intellectual snob who felt he was twenty years ahead of his time and did not enjoy cooking down to the masses."
  • Dr. Stubbs – The doctor in Dunbar's squadron who grounds any pilot who requests it. He falls into an existential crisis after Colonel Korn shuts down his medical tents.
  • Sergeant Towser – Major Major's assistant; he prevents anyone from seeing the Major while he is in his office, and only allows them in when the Major is gone. Due to Major Major's unwillingness to see anyone, Towser is the de facto head of the 256th squadron. Towser also holds no desire for a promotion or any interest in the war.
  • Corporal (later Sergeant) Whitcomb – An atheist who constantly antagonizes and looks to usurp Chaplain Tappman, his direct superior. He is openly rude and contemptuous, absolutely detests his seclusion in the woods, and is very easily offended. He is later promoted to sergeant by Cathcart after telling him about his idea with sending fake personalized letters to deceased soldiers families.
  • Chief White Halfoat – An American Indian whose family was forced to move from wherever they settled because oil was always discovered. He is transferred to Pianosa after Wintergreen strikes an oil pipe and nearly drowns. In the army, he works as Captain Black's assistant. He jokingly threatens to slit Captain Flume's throat while he sleeps, which accidentally drives Flume to paranoid madness. After this, he becomes Doc Daneeka's tent mate and terrorizes him as well. During the Siege of Bologna, he decides that he will eventually die of pneumonia, which he ultimately does.
  • Ex-P.F.C. Wintergreen – An ex-P.F.C. because of his constant urge to go AWOL, Wintergreen has been demoted so many times that he entertains hopes of becoming an ex-general. Due to his position in charge of mail distribution, he wields a great amount of power in the novel. By forging documents and destroying mail, he becomes more powerful than the generals. His main concern throughout the novel is humiliating General Peckem because he was the first person to have demoted him. He also frequently butts heads with Milo as they are both in the black market business.

Unnamed characters

[edit]
  • The C.I.D. Investigators The first CID man is sent to investigate the excessive censoring being done by a soldier signing his name as "Washington Irving", an alias Yossarian used on a whim. He enters the hospital, posing as a patient, then comes down with pneumonia and becomes a real patient. The second CID man is sent to investigate the continued use of "Washington Irving"'s name, which is now at the hands of Major Major. He goes undercover as a pilot but blows his cover by telling everyone who he is. The two investigators end up pursuing each other instead of making any actual headway in their cases.
  • Dreedle's girl – Allegedly a nurse, she follows General Dreedle wherever he goes. She is a very attractive woman and Dreedle keeps her around to torment his son-in-law, Colonel Moodus, hoping to catch him in an adulterous situation for which he can punish him.
  • The maid with the lime-colored panties A woman with whom Yossarian paradoxically falls in love, because she is the only woman that Yossarian can't possibly fall in love with. Her charm lies in how willing she is to have relations with anyone who asks her.
  • Nately's Whore A prostitute in Rome with whom Nately is deeply in love. She despises Yossarian and is wildly apathetic towards Nately until he allows her to get some sleep. She has a young sister whom Nately is determined to send to college. After Nately dies, Nately's whore blames Yossarian for his fate and spends the rest of the novel attempting to murder him.
  • Nately's Whore's Kid Sister The young sister of the prostitute Nately fancies in Rome. After her older sister develops a mania against Yossarian, she and the prostitutes are turned out onto the streets.
  • The new recruits A group of new young officer-pilots whom Yossarian hates. They are friends from back home and are excited to take part in the war. They take over most of Yossarian's tent and throw out all of Mudd's belongings.
  • The old man in Rome – A 107-year-old man who lives in the brothel frequented by Nately. He sides with whoever is in power and mocks Nately's idealism. He reminds Nately uncomfortably of his own father for the reason that the old man is absolutely nothing like his father.
  • The Soldier in White – An unnamed soldier wrapped completely in bandages. He is connected to two bottles of unidentified liquid, one of which feeds into him through an IV, while the other drains from his catheter. When the bottles are respectively empty and full, their roles are exchanged. Dunbar claims there is actually no one under the bandages. The other patients avoid him because they dislike the fact that he is worse off than they are. The Texan is the only patient who talks to him and tries to convince the others to do so. He eventually dies without anyone realizing. Later, a burn victim named Lieutenant Schmulker is admitted to the hospital with similar bandages; the other patients experience mass hysteria, convinced that the original Soldier in White has mysteriously returned.
  • The Texan – A patriotic soldier who keeps the men from staying in the medical ward to hide out from the war by being overly friendly. He is in the ward when Dunbar and Yossarian enter, attempting to escape their duties in their respective squadrons, but they are eventually chased out by his pleasant demeanor.

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The characters in Joseph Heller's Catch-22, a satirical novel published in 1961 that critiques the absurdities of military bureaucracy during World War II, revolve around Captain John Yossarian, a bombardier fixated on surviving endless combat missions amid a system designed to perpetuate peril.[1][2] Central to the ensemble are figures like Milo Minderbinder, the syndicate-running mess officer whose profit-driven schemes transcend national loyalties; Colonel Cathcart, whose ambition drives relentless increases in required flight missions; and Chaplain Tappman, a mild-mannered cleric ensnared by investigations and existential doubt.[3][4] Supporting roles, including the mechanically ingenious Orr, the fatalistic Snowden, and various scheming officers, amplify the novel's portrayal of institutional madness and individual resilience, drawing from Heller's own wartime experiences as a B-25 pilot.[5][6]

Central Squadron Members

Yossarian

Captain John Yossarian is the protagonist of Joseph Heller's satirical novel Catch-22, published in 1961. A 28-year-old bombardier in the United States Army Air Forces' 256th Squadron, he is stationed on the fictional Mediterranean island of Pianosa toward the end of World War II.[7][8][9] Yossarian's defining trait is his obsessive commitment to self-preservation amid the perils of aerial combat and military bureaucracy, leading him to perceive the war—and even civilians and allies—as a collective conspiracy to kill him. He rejects ideals of heroism and courage as irrational, prioritizing survival over duty, which positions him as an anti-hero who navigates the novel's absurdities through evasion, feigned illnesses, and hospital stays rather than conformity.[10][7][8] Central to his arc is the futile pursuit of grounding from combat missions, initially set at 25 but repeatedly raised to 40 and 50 by superiors Colonel Cathcart and Colonel Korn to enhance their promotion prospects; the Catch-22 doctrine bars discharge for insanity, as requesting it demonstrates sanity. Traumatized by events like the mid-air death of gunner Snowden over Avignon, Yossarian grows increasingly alienated from his squadron, engaging in profane outbursts, casual sexual encounters with nurses like Duckett and prostitutes, and defiance of authority, culminating in his desertion to Sweden.[10][7][11] While integrated into squadron life through shared missions and tents, Yossarian remains an outsider, his sanity highlighting the collective madness around him, including dealings with mess officer Milo Minderbinder's profiteering syndicate. He reappears as an elderly figure in Heller's 1994 sequel Closing Time.[10][12]

Orr

Orr is a bombardier assigned to the same B-25 squadron as Captain Yossarian on the fictional island of Pianosa during World War II, sharing a tent with Yossarian and serving as his roommate.[13] Described as a diminutive, buck-toothed airman with a protruding jaw and a gnome-like appearance, Orr exhibits mechanical ingenuity by constantly repairing and improving the tent's facilities, such as installing a wood-burning stove that makes it the most comfortable in the squadron.[14] [15] His repeated crash-landings into the Mediterranean Sea after missions—occurring multiple times despite flak damage—earn him a reputation for bad luck and apparent madness, yet he survives each incident through skillful ditching techniques honed by practicing swimming and rowing in the bay.[13] [16] Orr embodies a paradoxical survival philosophy, cheerfully asserting that adverse events, like his frequent shoot-downs, ultimately improve his piloting abilities and prepare him for future ordeals, reflecting the novel's theme of absurd resilience amid bureaucratic and mortal threats.[15] Trapped in the titular Catch-22, Orr's evident insanity should exempt him from further flights, but the regulation requires him to request grounding, which he refuses to do, perpetuating his missions.[17] After one final ditching, Orr vanishes, presumed lost at sea, but later intelligence reveals he has successfully rowed a life raft hundreds of miles to neutral Sweden, having orchestrated his escapes deliberately to desert the war.[18] [19] This revelation prompts Yossarian to recognize Orr's understated cunning—contrasting his feigned simplicity—and inspires Yossarian's own flight to Sweden, underscoring Orr's role as the narrative's improbable model of practical defiance against institutional absurdity.[16] [20]

Lieutenant Nately

Lieutenant Nately is a nineteen-year-old lieutenant in Yossarian's squadron in Joseph Heller's Catch-22, portrayed as a good-natured and ingenuous youth from a wealthy American family.[3][4] He serves as a crew member on bombing missions, including as co-pilot during at least one flight over enemy territory where equipment failures heighten the dangers faced by the crew.[21] Nately's idealism manifests in his romantic pursuit of a Roman prostitute, whom he idealistically seeks to marry and redeem despite her indifference and the squalor of her profession; this infatuation leads him to frequent visits to Rome alongside Yossarian and others, exposing him to the city's underbelly.[3][9] His naivety is challenged through encounters like a heated philosophical debate with a cynical elderly Italian in a brothel, where Nately defends war and patriotism against the man's argument that absolute power corrupts and renders such ideals futile.[22][4] Throughout the narrative, Nately's optimistic worldview erodes amid the squadron's escalating mission requirements and the brutal realities of combat, underscoring themes of lost innocence in Heller's satire.[9] His close friendship with Yossarian highlights contrasts between youthful enthusiasm and survival-driven cynicism, with Nately often defending the war's purported nobility.[3]

Dunbar

Dunbar is a bombardier and close friend of Yossarian in the 256th Squadron, distinguished by his acute awareness of the ongoing war's existential threats, unlike many comrades who remain detached or in denial.[3][23] He adopts a deliberate strategy to extend his subjective lifespan by cultivating boredom, reasoning that time dilates during tedious activities, such as skeet shooting, which he despises but pursues to slow the passage of days amid mounting missions.[24][25] This philosophy manifests in Dunbar's mischievous collaborations with Yossarian, including fondling nurses and inciting brawls in the hospital ward to further prolong their stays through administrative chaos.[14] During combat missions, such as the one over Bologna, Dunbar displays bitterness, particularly after Orr's presumed disappearance, leading him to deviate from targets by dropping bombs harmlessly off-course.[26] Dunbar's fate underscores the novel's bureaucratic absurdity: he is mysteriously "disappeared" by superiors, possibly beaten and declared dead in a hospital mix-up involving the return of the Soldier in White, though his ultimate status remains unresolved in Heller's narrative.[27][28] This event highlights the arbitrary power wielded by military authority, rendering individual agency futile against institutional caprice.[14]

Snowden

Snowden is an American airman and tail gunner in Yossarian's B-25 bomber squadron during World War II, as depicted in Joseph Heller's 1961 novel Catch-22. He appears primarily in the context of a bombing mission over Avignon, France, where his plane is hit by German anti-aircraft fire, resulting in his fatal wounding.[29][30] During the incident, Snowden suffers a severe laceration to his thigh that exposes his intestines and causes catastrophic internal hemorrhage, though this detail emerges gradually across the narrative rather than immediately. Yossarian, serving as bombardier, attempts to aid him in the plane's bomb bay by covering the wound and providing morphine, but Snowden succumbs despite these efforts, whispering "I'm cold, I'm cold" in his final moments.[31][32] Snowden's death serves as a structural and thematic pivot in the novel, revisited in fragmented flashbacks that build to a full revelation in Chapter 41, emphasizing the psychological trauma inflicted on Yossarian. This event strips away Yossarian's illusions about the war, leading to the epiphany that "man was matter" and inherently vulnerable, with no transcendent purpose shielding individuals from bureaucratic indifference and random violence.[31][33] The refrain "Where are the Snowdens of yesteryear?" uttered by characters like the chaplain, evokes the overlooked deaths of anonymous soldiers, critiquing the military's commodification of lives and the erasure of personal tragedy amid institutional absurdity. Snowden himself remains a relatively underdeveloped figure prior to his demise, functioning more as a catalyst for Yossarian's disillusionment than a fully fleshed-out personality.[29][34]

Medical and Support Personnel

Doc Daneeka

Doc Daneeka serves as the flight surgeon for Yossarian's squadron in Joseph Heller's Catch-22, responsible for medical certifications required for combat missions.[35] He introduces the novel's titular paradox to Yossarian, explaining that a pilot deemed insane could be grounded but that requesting such relief demonstrates rationality, thus disqualifying the individual under Catch-22 regulations.[3] [4] Daneeka adheres to orders from Colonel Cathcart prohibiting him from exempting sane soldiers from duty, despite Yossarian's pleas amid mounting missions.[35] Characterized by chronic complaints and hypochondria, Daneeka frequently laments his health woes and resents the war's disruption of his prior practice as an internist on Staten Island.[9] [36] He systematically avoids personal risk by delegating tent duties to enlisted men while prioritizing administrative tasks, embodying bureaucratic self-preservation over frontline medical support.[14] To secure extra flight pay without exposure, Daneeka arranges for his name to appear on manifests, such as McWatt's, despite never boarding the aircraft.[35] [4] This scheme backfires when McWatt's plane crashes into a mountain, killing the crew; military records declare Daneeka deceased based on the roster, severing his pay, insurance, and official existence despite his survival on the ground.[9] [37] Bureaucratic insistence on his death erases him from payrolls and records, prompting futile protests to his wife, who receives condolence benefits and relocates, leaving Daneeka isolated and pleading for recognition amid the system's unyielding logic.[14] This episode underscores the novel's critique of institutional rigidity, as Daneeka's "death" persists administratively even as he lives in obscurity.[35]

Chaplain Tappman

Captain Albert Taylor Tappman, commonly referred to as the Chaplain, serves as the Anabaptist chaplain for Yossarian's squadron in Joseph Heller's Catch-22.[14] He is depicted as a shy, self-conscious, and timid individual who resides in a modest tent on the wooded outskirts of the base, reflecting his introverted nature and detachment from the aggressive military environment.[14] Tappman deeply loves his wife and three young children, frequently expressing concern for their well-being amid his own uncertainties, and maintains a genuine faith in God despite the surrounding chaos of war.[38] Throughout the novel, Tappman grapples with his ill-defined role in the military, feeling purposeless as he performs perfunctory duties like conducting services and writing letters for the deceased, such as composing Snowden's final correspondence.[39] His timidity makes him vulnerable to intimidation by superiors and even his assistant, Corporal Whitcomb, who resents him and pushes aggressive policies like mandatory letter-writing campaigns.[40] During Captain Black's Glorious Loyalty Oath Crusade, Tappman is coerced into participating in the escalating oath-signing rituals, highlighting the absurd bureaucratic pressures that undermine individual integrity, though he remains one of the few morally upright figures, consistently aiding Yossarian without ulterior motives.[40] The chaplain's character arc illustrates a gradual transformation from ineffectual passivity to tentative assertiveness, as the horrors of combat erode his faith and compel him to question divine justice amid senseless violence and institutional absurdity.[39] He becomes a quiet advocate for reason, enduring unfounded accusations—such as the theft of plum tomatoes from Colonel Cathcart's garden—that lead to investigations by military authorities, further exposing the paranoia and incompetence of the command structure.[40] Tappman's decency and internal struggles position him as a sympathetic counterpoint to the novel's more cynical figures, embodying the personal toll of wartime bureaucracy on conscientious individuals.[38]

Administrative and Mess Officers

Milo Minderbinder

Milo Minderbinder serves as the mess officer for the 256th Squadron in Joseph Heller's Catch-22, initially tasked with procuring food and supplies but rapidly expanding into international black-market operations.[41] Through his creation of M&M Enterprises—named after his initials—he establishes a vast syndicate that trades commodities such as eggs, silk, and cotton across the Mediterranean, amassing immense wealth by exploiting wartime shortages and logistics.[42][43] Minderbinder's business acumen enables him to secure deals that benefit the squadron's mess hall, such as importing fresh eggs from Sweden, but his pursuits prioritize profit over loyalty, leading him to contract with Axis forces.[41] He famously bombs his own airfield on behalf of the Germans after they outbid Allied offers, rationalizing the act as advancing the syndicate's interests, in which he insists "everyone has a share," despite the operation's direct harm to U.S. personnel.[11][44] This venture exemplifies his willingness to endanger comrades for financial gain, culminating in a near-bankrupting purchase of Egypt's entire cotton crop at inflated prices, though the syndicate recovers through subsequent trades.[43] As a satirical figure, Minderbinder embodies unchecked entrepreneurial zeal devoid of moral constraints, transforming military logistics into a parody of capitalist excess where patriotism yields to commerce.[42] His interactions with protagonist Yossarian shift from camaraderie to antagonism, highlighting the novel's critique of institutional absurdities, as Minderbinder's loyalty remains solely to profit margins tracked with meticulous precision.[41]

Major Major Major Major

Major Major Major Major serves as the squadron commander in Joseph Heller's 1961 novel Catch-22, embodying the absurdity of military bureaucracy and personal isolation. His unusual name originates from his father's whimsical decision to christen him Major Major Major, rejecting conventional names like Caleb or Bruce in favor of the repetitive "Major" drawn from a hat, ostensibly as a joke. Enlisting as a private during World War II, he undergoes a series of inexplicable promotions: first to sergeant for excelling at a horseshoe tournament despite no prior experience, then rapidly through the ranks to captain. To eliminate the awkwardness of addressing "Captain Major," the Army elevates him to major, yielding the quadruple "Major Major Major Major"—a promotion that amplifies rather than resolves the confusion.[45] From childhood, Major Major exhibits profound social awkwardness, resembling film actor Henry Fonda yet repelling peers and adults alike with his discomforting presence; other children pelt him with stones, and parents find him eerily taciturn. Orphaned early after his mother's death in childbirth, he grows up on a farm, develops a talent for playing the horseshoe game "Major Major," and attends college where he plays the same game but fails academically. In the Army, his detachment intensifies upon assuming command of the 256th Squadron on Pianosa, where he hides from subordinates by having his sergeant lock the office door whenever he is inside, admitting visitors only during his contrived absences—often involving escapes via the window or rooftop. This evasion tactic prevents meaningful leadership, leaving administrative duties to fester amid the squadron's chaos.[46] Major Major's interactions highlight his ineptitude and the novel's satirical critique of authority: he refuses audiences with Yossarian, forges exemption letters under pseudonyms like Washington Irving and John Milton (initially for amusement, later out of self-pity), and briefly wears disguises such as dark glasses and a mustache to avoid recognition while signing documents. Appointed by Colonel Cathcart despite lacking qualifications—predating the colonel's mission-raising schemes—Major Major symbolizes passive incompetence, unable to assert control or connect with his men, ultimately reinforcing the impersonal machinery of war that renders individuals irrelevant. His arc culminates in further withdrawal, as he impersonates a private to play basketball incognito, only to face rejection that mirrors his lifelong alienation.[47]

Commanding Officers

Colonel Cathcart

Colonel Cathcart serves as the commanding colonel of the fictional U.S. Army Air Forces squadron stationed on the island of Pianosa during World War II, overseeing operations including combat missions flown by protagonist John Yossarian and his fellow bombardiers.[48] [3] Described as a 36-year-old man who is slick yet slipshod, successful but deeply unhappy, Cathcart lumbers awkwardly when he walks and displays a dashing demeanor marred by underlying anguish over his age and achievements relative to peers.[48] [49] His personality combines conceit with dejection, marked by chronic indecisiveness, a lack of sound judgment, and an absence of confidence in decision-making, which exemplifies broader critiques of military bureaucracy in the novel.[50] [14] Driven by an overriding ambition to achieve promotion to general, Cathcart repeatedly escalates the number of required combat missions for squadron members to complete their tours of duty, using these hikes—from an initial 40 to as high as 80—as a means to curry favor with superiors like General Dreedle.[48] [3] [4] This practice directly endangers pilots' lives, positioning Cathcart as Yossarian's primary antagonist, as he prioritizes personal advancement over troop welfare by volunteering the squadron for perilous assignments in hopes of gaining recognition.[48] [50] He collaborates closely with his intellectual aide, Lieutenant Colonel Korn, in schemes such as mandating group prayers led by the chaplain to project an image of piety and enhance public relations, though these efforts stem more from a desire for favorable media coverage—particularly in outlets like the Saturday Evening Post—than genuine concern.[3] [14] Cathcart's incompetence and laziness further manifest in his reliance on superficial tactics for acclaim, such as staging bombing runs over non-strategic targets to impress observers, while ignoring logistical realities and soldier morale.[50] His actions underscore themes of institutional absurdity, where individual careerism overrides operational efficacy, contributing to the squadron's pervasive sense of entrapment.[48] Despite his authority, Cathcart remains perpetually dissatisfied, viewing himself as insufficiently distinguished compared to younger or more celebrated officers.[49]

General Dreedle

General Dreedle serves as the wing commander overseeing the United States Army Air Forces base on Pianosa, where Yossarian's squadron operates during World War II operations in the novel Catch-22.[3] As a high-ranking officer, he embodies the archetype of a no-nonsense military leader, prioritizing operational efficiency and discipline amid the absurdities of bureaucratic warfare.[4] His authority extends to approving or influencing mission policies, though he often clashes with subordinate officers and rival commanders like General Peckem, engaging in petty power struggles that highlight the novel's satire on military hierarchy.[51] Physically described as a blunt, chunky, barrel-chested man in his early fifties with a squat red nose, Dreedle projects an image of unyielding toughness, frequently accompanied by his son-in-law, Colonel Moodus, and a voluptuous nurse whose presence underscores his personal indulgences.[4] His personality is marked by irascibility and a gruff demeanor, often veering into sadism, as seen in his habitual abuse of Moodus—such as publicly slapping him—which he derives amusement from, even relocating personnel like Chief White Halfoat to facilitate repeated humiliations.[52] Dreedle maintains a strict disciplinarian stance, reflecting a belief in absolute command authority; during a squadron briefing, he insists on the right to execute dissenting officers on the spot, only relenting after Moodus corrects him on legal constraints.[53] Throughout the narrative, Dreedle's actions exemplify the novel's critique of wartime leadership, where personal vendettas and arbitrary decisions supersede strategic rationale, contributing to the escalating mission requirements imposed on pilots.[54] His eventual replacement as wing commander by forces aligned with Peckem further illustrates the shifting, absurd power dynamics within the command structure.[55]

Lieutenant Scheisskopf

Lieutenant Scheisskopf begins as the training commander of Yossarian's cadet squadron during basic training in Santa Ana, California, where he demonstrates an intense fixation on military parades rather than combat preparation.[56] His name, derived from German meaning "shithead," underscores his portrayal as a pompous and inept officer whose priorities reflect the novel's critique of bureaucratic absurdity.[56] Scheisskopf obsesses over weekly parade competitions, devising rigid marching formations—such as soldiers keeping arms rigidly at their sides—to secure pennants, which he views as marks of genius despite their irrelevance to warfare.[56] He appoints officers based on loyalty to this pursuit, harbors irrational resentment toward Clevinger for proposing democratic elections of parade leaders (which ironically succeed), and subjects him to a farcical trial for fabricated offenses like insubordination.[56] [5] Scheisskopf's wife, frustrated by his neglect, engages in affairs with squadron members, including Yossarian, whom she propositions in exchange for advancing her husband's career; she later assumes the alias "Dori Duz" to facilitate such encounters while Scheisskopf remains oblivious or indifferent.[56] [5] Through improbable promotions, Scheisskopf rises to colonel under General Peckem in Special Services, where Peckem privately scorns his stupidity, and eventually to lieutenant general via a clerical error in a memo, granting him authority to impose universal marching orders on troops.[5] His ascent exemplifies the novel's theme of advancement through folly and connections rather than merit, culminating in a position of high command ill-suited to his parade-centric worldview.[5]

Other Named Military Personnel

Chief White Halfoat

Chief White Halfoat is a Native American character in Joseph Heller's 1961 novel Catch-22, depicted as a full-blooded Apache from Oklahoma who serves as assistant intelligence officer under Captain Black, despite being unable to read or write.[57][14] He attributes his illiteracy to systemic oppression by white settlers, claiming it prevented his education, and embodies resentment toward historical injustices against his people, including repeated forced relocations.[58] Halfoat's family history underscores this grievance: each time they settled on land, oil was discovered beneath it, prompting government or corporate intervention to displace them, a pattern that occurred multiple times across Oklahoma and other regions.[59][14] Physically described as handsome and swarthy with a heavy, hard-boned face and tousled black hair, Halfoat is an alcoholic who shares a tent with Captain Flume, the public relations officer, whom he routinely threatens to murder by slitting his throat during drunken rages—threats he never fulfills, as he invariably passes out first.[60][5] His tentmate Flume lives in constant fear of these outbursts, eventually fleeing to sleep in the woods. Halfoat also interacts with Yossarian, predicting rain with uncanny accuracy and boasting about his heritage while cursing American treatment of Native Americans.[3] He resolves to contract pneumonia as a form of ironic self-destruction amid the squadron's absurdities.[3] Halfoat's portrayal satirizes themes of marginalization and bureaucratic irrelevance in the military, highlighting how his nominal role exploits his ethnic identity without granting real authority or literacy skills.[57] His chapter, the novel's fifth, titled after him, introduces these traits through conversations revealing the squadron's chaotic interpersonal dynamics.[58]

Ex-P.F.C. Wintergreen

Ex-P.F.C. Wintergreen serves as the mail clerk at the Twenty-seventh Air Force Headquarters in Joseph Heller's Catch-22, where he intercepts, forges, and manipulates documents to exert significant unofficial influence over military operations.[61] His repeated absences without leave (AWOL) result in frequent demotions from private first class to private, along with punishments such as digging holes, yet he views these as patriotic acts of rule-breaking in service to his country.[62][63] Wintergreen leverages his position over the mimeograph machine and mail sorting to control information flow, trading letters and correspondence for personal gain and political maneuvering within the bureaucracy.[64][5] He provides protagonist John Yossarian with an alternative explanation of the titular Catch-22, emphasizing the inescapable logic of mandatory flight missions despite pilots' pleas for relief.[65] Despite his low rank and punitive cycle, Wintergreen's resourcefulness and disdain for authority render him one of the novel's most potent figures in undermining formal hierarchies.[66]

Captain Black

Captain Black is the squadron intelligence officer in Joseph Heller's Catch-22, tasked with monitoring potential subversive activities among the personnel.[67] His role involves compiling lists of suspected disloyal individuals, often based on trivial or arbitrary criteria, such as wearing eyeglasses or using words like "panacea" and "utopia."[68] Resentful after being passed over for promotion to major—a position awarded to the inexperienced Major Major—Black channels his envy into petty vendettas.[67] He derives sadistic pleasure from bureaucratic harassment, gloating over the men's discomfort during hazardous missions like the Bologna operation ordered by Colonel Cathcart.[69] Black spearheads the Glorious Loyalty Oath Crusade, compelling officers and enlisted men to sign proliferating oaths of allegiance before mundane activities such as eating meals, receiving mail, or entering the briefing room.[70] He rationalizes the escalating requirements as a measure of true patriotism, insisting that the loyal "would not mind signing all the loyalty oaths they had to," while using the campaign to isolate and discredit Major Major by questioning his refusal to sign.[69] This initiative spirals into absurdity, requiring oaths atop prior oaths, until Colonel Cathcart halts it amid operational disruptions.[67] His malice extends to personal grudges; having been stranded in England during a squadron furlough to Rome, Black harbors lasting bitterness toward those who enjoyed the officers' club privileges he missed, viewing it as evidence of their disloyalty.[69] Portrayed as vengeful and mean-spirited, Black embodies the novel's critique of institutional paranoia and authoritarian pettiness within the military bureaucracy.[11]

Minor Named Characters

Additional Squadron and Civilian Figures

Doc Daneeka is the squadron's flight surgeon, a self-pitying physician whose civilian medical practice was disrupted by the war, leading him to prioritize personal gain over patient care by falsifying flight logs for extra pay without actually flying.[3] He articulates the novel's titular Catch-22 to Yossarian, stating that a pilot requesting grounding for insanity demonstrates sanity by recognizing his own insanity, thereby disqualifying himself from exemption.[4] Daneeka is officially declared dead after McWatt's plane crashes with his name on the manifest, despite surviving, resulting in his wife receiving death benefits and relocating without forwarding her address.[5][4] Nurse Duckett functions as a hospital nurse on Pianosa, initially repelled by Yossarian's advances but eventually engaging in a romantic and sexual relationship with him.[3] Her interactions highlight the hospital's absurd dynamics, including pranks and fleeting alliances amid the squadron's dysfunction.[5] She later ends the affair to marry a doctor motivated by financial security.[4] Nurse Cramer operates as a rigidly dutiful nurse in the Pianosa hospital, adhering to protocols by force-feeding the Soldier in White, whom Yossarian suspects she contributes to killing through overly zealous care.[5] Luciana appears as a civilian woman encountered by Yossarian in Rome, where they share a brief romantic liaison marked by her mysterious "invisible scar" and his infatuation, culminating in her departure after he fails to pursue her further.[4] Mrs. Daneeka serves as the civilian wife of Doc Daneeka, notified of his erroneous death declaration following the plane crash, after which she claims insurance payouts and relocates to Lansing, Michigan, severing contact.[4]

Unnamed Characters

Key Unnamed Figures

The Soldier in White appears in the hospital as a figure entirely encased in plaster and bandages, with tubes connecting bottles of saline solution that drip into and out of his body, rendering him a passive symbol of institutional dehumanization. Yossarian and others perceive him as lifeless or already deceased upon first encounter, yet nurses continue futile treatments, including swapping input and output fluids in a grotesque loop that underscores bureaucratic absurdity. He returns later, only to die definitively, highlighting the military medical system's detachment from individual humanity.[71][72] The Texan, encountered in the hospital ward, embodies relentless optimism and conformity amid suffering, engaging patients in monotonous conversations about weather, baseball, and patriotism to convert them to his worldview. His persistent cheerfulness irritates Yossarian and Dunbar, who feign agreement to escape interaction, while he ignores the Soldier in White's plight. The Texan eventually expires unnoticed by staff or patients, his death mirroring the overlooked fatalities in the war's machinery.[14][4] Nately's whore, an unnamed Roman prostitute, initially treats Nately with indifference despite his infatuation and gifts, viewing clients transactionally until exhaustion from constant demands prompts rare vulnerability. After Nately's death, she assaults Yossarian with a knife in vengeful grief, persisting even after capture, which reveals a depth of loyalty absent in her prior detachment. Her actions critique romanticized notions of affection in desperation, as she later resumes work indifferently.[4][27]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.