Jobs & Education5 mins ago
Pre-"Catch 22"
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Prior to Joseph Heller's book, was there a term for the situation a "Catch 22" refers to?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.we read it in secondary school. Soem did find ti very hard going, but the teacher helped by showing us the film after a few days. This meant that those who were really struggling with the book had a better idea what was going on - it made the flashbacks etc easier to follow. Also, I know some of us who had read it thru started again, so we could enjoy it more second time round. Good Luck. The book I struggle with is The English Patient. Have given up now...I just can't seem to get into it at all.
The term referred originally to a military rule whose provisions are mutually frustrating. Much like a bureaucratic process. It might have related to a particular cluase in some military hand book, who knows. I don't think there was anything 'vicious' about it, it was just a pain in the bottom. Prior to this, you might have:
caught between a rock and a hard place, a bind, contradiction, dilemma, Gordian knot, in a pickle, lose-lose situation, no-win situation, paradox, predicament, quagmire, spot