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All Quiet On The Western Front And Sun Also Rises...
Comparison between All Quiet on the Western Front and The Sun Also Rises
The two books, All Quiet on the Western Front and The Sun Also rises have a number of differences
and similarities. I will address the topics, characters, time periods and writing styles along with my
opinion on the two books. The topic of All Quiet on the Western Front describes how a German
soldier and his friends, in the middle of World War 1, deal with the stresses of the war and how the
soldiers cope with the conditions they are in and the deaths of comrades; these soldiers are also
friends. The book also conveys the stresses of coping with civilian life when disconnected from the
war. The topic of The Sun Also Rises deals with the stresses that a woman goes through after losing
her true love in the war. The themes are different as the stories do not mirror each other as far as the
plot goes. However, they are similar in the fact that both stories touch on people managing life. I
prefer All Quiet on the Western Front because the author wrote the story from the perspective of the
soldier, Paul Baumer and the writing make you feel like ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
All Quiet on the Western Front, most of the main characters are friends who were acquainted with
each other before entering the war. The main character describes not only his surroundings but also
his feelings throughout the book. In The Sun Also Rises, the characters are similar in the fact that
they are also a group of friends. Although there was a similarity, the characters' feelings were not
emphasized as much. The author in All Quiet on the Western Front described the characters' in
pronounced detail, in reading the book, I felt like I knew each character. In The Sun Also Rises, it
was difficult to relate to the characters as they all had different backgrounds and their feelings going
through the story were not as in–depth. In addition, the time periods had similarities and
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A Comparison Of All Quiet On The Western Front
All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque and actual happenings from the war
display many similarities. The book does go much more in depth with the war than any other
resource or letter, but there is similarities in everything in the book to any other info about World
War 1. Looking from All Quiet on the Western Front to actual happenings in the war you can bring
them together and see the similarities in living as a soldier in the trenches, and how the men passed
time during World War 1.
Life for a soldier in the trenches in WW1 as described in actual letters and as described as in the
book sounded very alike. In the book it talks about the human eating rats, trench foot and leaving the
dead bodies lying on the ground just for something dry to walk on. "Killing each separate louse is a
tedious business when a man has hundreds. The little beasts are hard and the everlasting cracking
with one's fingernails very soon becomes wearisome." (Remarque, 1929, p. 75) This is an example
in the book that can be connected to real life is when Paul and all the other men are sitting around
the fire picking lice out and burning them in a tin. "Since then we have learned better than to be shy
about such trifling immodesties." (Remarque, 1929 p. 8) In that sentence Paul is discussing the
toilets, or latrines, saying how when he first started using the them they were nasty and it was
embarrassing, but now he's comfortable with using them. "I cannot bear to look at his hands, they
are like wax. Under the nails is the dirt of the trenches, it shows through blue–black like poison."
(Remarque, 1929, p. 15) Paul describes the trench mud as poison, because it is. It caused men to
lose limbs, feet and sometimes their lives because it caused gangrene. "The rats here are particularly
repulsive they are so fat–––the kind we call corpse–rats." (Remarque, 1929, p. 102) "The trenches
could be very muddy and smelly. There were many dead bodies buried nearby and the latrines
(toilets) sometimes overflowed into the trenches. Millions of rats infested the trenches and some
grew as big as cats. There was also a big problem with lice that tormented the soldiers on a daily
basis." (Heirs, 2014). In the article it
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All Quiet On The Western Front Analysis
All Quiet on the Western Front: A Literary Analysis
The Author and His Times Erich Paul Remark (most commonly known as Erich Maria Remarque)
was born on June 22nd, 1998 in Onsabruck, Westphalia; a town in Germany. He was the son of his
mother Anna Maria Stallnecht Remark and his father, Peter Franz Remark, who was a master
machinist and a bookbinder. As a young boy growing up in a lower–working class family, he moved
houses eleven times between 1898 and 1912 and was called Schmieren, or "Smudge" by his fellow
students. He began to write when he was aged sixteen in which he developed a passion for creating
stories. Erich eventually attended the University of Münster in 1913 to pursue a career as an
elementary school teacher. In 1915, him and other students created a brotherhood focusing on
literature. Through this, he created a short story titled "The Lady with the Golden Eyes", an essay
called "From the Time of Youth", and a poem which is titled "I and You". All of these were
published in the Onsabruck newspaper and sparked Remarque's popularity in the literary culture of
the time. After he won an essay contest in 1916, he was spontaneously drafted into the German army
as a musketeer. Sadly, his mother died right after he completed basic training in Onsabruck on
September 9, 1917. In July of that year, Remarque's fleet advances to Flanders, where the some of
the bloodiest fighting was happening in World War I. The effects of trench Warfare took a toll on
him and he never truly recovered from when he carried his friend Troske out of enemy fire before he
shortly after died of shrapnel wounds on the way to a medic. During a period of five months, the
German and the Allied armies fought away eventually creating up to 770,000 casualties. Remarque
eventually becoming sprayed with grenade splinters in neck, wrist, and knee, he left the battlefield
on July 31. He suffered from PTSD after the war and it took him a year to recover to a decent state,
but he was still concealing it through his wit. During this year he wrote an abundance of poems,
essays, and sketches and started to get jobs at local posts. From 1920 to 1922, he juggled being an
aspiring pianist, a worker in a post, and being an avid writer for his own
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Escape The War Zone Essay
Escape the War Zone The War Zone (Tim Roth, 1999) narrates a story of a fifteen–year–old teenager
named Tom, whose life drastically changes right after his family moves from London to a small
town with no kith nor kin. Tom considers his new home a prison and develops a strong abhorrence
to his father after discovering the latter to have been raping Tom's older sister, Jessie, while Tom's
mother prefers not to pay attention to what is happening around, devoting herself to a newborn
child. Unveiling the tragedy within the ordinary English family, The War Zone highlights the
conflict of reasoning and emotion which appears as a response to the problem of incest and rape.
The film's exposition sets a depressing mood from the beginning. The opening tracking shot depicts
Tom rushing off the hill along the asphalt road, replaced by a bumpy path which leads to a jail–like
house, indicating metaphorical running towards tribulation. Steadily dull weather without any
glimpse of sunlight insinuates the apathetic sentiment within the family. Remarkably, Tom's house
family has settled on the seashore, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
His endeavor to capture the rape on camera was an attempt to disown the situation and look at it
from another side through the camera lens, replacing himself with an impartial observer, an
instrument without any feelings and biases. As soon as Tom accessed the evidence, he could not
cope with what he had seen, and threw the camera into the sea, denying the true atrocity. Only after
Tom discovers that his father had gone too far with his heinous desires and ended up raping Tom's
newborn sister, the teenager found the courage to confront his father. However, Tom's hatred waded
through his reasoning, so he stabbed his father with a kitchen knife, rushing into the embrace of rage
and
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All Quiet On The Western Front Earth Quotes
In the novel All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Remarque, the central symbol is the earth.
Earth represents life, death and perverse nature. It ties to other symbols such as dirt, ground,
trenches, and plants. Earth represents life because it provided protection and shelter to keep the
soldiers alive.. Basically, when the soldiers cling on to earth, they are basically clinging on to life
because earth provides them with the necessary essentials to be sustain life such as food which gives
them life. Earth is the only thing that the soldiers can rely on to keep them alive in the war. (?)
Ironically, the earth also represents death because she soldiers who die in the war would be buried
underneath in the ground. Earth is where the decrease ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
According to page 55 of chapter 4, it states "In the spasm of terror, under the hailing of annihilation
in the bellowing of death of the explosions, O Earth, thou grantest us the great resisting surge of
new–won life. Our being, almost utterly carried away by the fury of the storm, streams back through
our hands from thee, and we, thy redeemed ones, bury ourselves in thee..." (Analyze quote) The
quote is what shows that earth represents life because us what saves the soldiers from possible
death. It is so as earth takes on the role of being the soldiers source of life as it is the most crucial
thing there is to them in battle to stay alive. The soldiers uses earth to do sustain life, they dig up
trenches, find shelter and food which all gives homes keep them alive and on the go. (how does it all
keep them alive?) In this quote specially, a bombardment had occurred and the soldiers used the
earth to shelter and bury themselves into it. The relationship between the soldiers is just like the
relationship between a mother and her child, who protects and nurtures the child. When the child is
scare and in a state of terror, the child would rely on the mother to stabilize with this, the mother
offers new life to the child just like how the earth offer new life to the soldiers fighting at the front
by being place of comfort. This shows how earth represents
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Paul Bauumer Quotes
In "All quiet on the western front" by Erich Maria Remarque, the main character is Paul Baumer. He
is a survivor in the world war I. The first quote explains who Paul is to the war. „We march up,
moody or good–tempered soldiers – we reach the zone where the front begins and become on the
instant human animals." P. 56. This quote explains that Paul and his group, are soldiers who are
trying to reach the zone, complete their mission and to survive. Paul sheds his soft, gentle, listening
self and adopts a killing, shouting, aggressive demeanor which he continually links to that of a
hungry or wounded animal. The second quote shows how soldier's mission looks like. "There were
thousands of Kantoreks, all of whom were convinced that there was only
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Betrayal In All Quiet On The Western Front
Has there really ever been a time in your life when everything has been all quiet? No matter who
you are, there is always something on your mind, or something that you have to deal with. There is
really only one way to achieve absolute quiet, and that is by death. War unfortunately gives millions
of people just that. All Quiet on the Western Front is a book that tells a story of young men and their
journey throughout WW1 from the German perspective. Three main points of war that will be
mentioned in this paper are betrayal, horror, and friendship. To begin with, betrayal was a very
prevalent theme in All Quiet on the Western Front. Firstly, an example of betrayal was when the
soldiers were given nice new uniforms to address the Kaiser, but ... Show more content on
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First of all, the passing down of the boots was a great example of friendship. With each passing of
the pair of boots came even more memories that are shared. It was also like a traditional type of
thing among the soldiers. Also, another time when a tremendous amount of friendship was shown
was when Bertinck stopped the flamethrowers. He sacrificed his own life to save the lives of his
fellow squad mates. Lastly, when Paul carried Kat all the way back to the dressing station was a
great example of friendship. Paul did not care what he had to do to make it back to the dressing
station to save Kat. It was a long and tedious walk for him but they got there eventually.
Unfortunately a piece of shrapnel hit Kat in the back of the head that was unseen, and he died. Thus,
friendship was probably one of the most important things to have during
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All Quiet On The Western Front Essay
All Quiet on the Western Front Essay We learn about past wars in history. We hear stories from
soldiers that partake in these wars, but do we really understand what goes on out on that battlefield?
We would have to see and experience it ourselves to fully grasp why soldiers come back so scarred.
Not only physically but emotionally, and socially as well. All quiet on the Western Front by Erich
Maria Remarque is a story told by a soldier named Paul Baumer. He shares his experiences of his
service in World War one. The realities of the war and the death that surrounded Paul Baumer were
so epic that he didn't even feel like he was himself when he visited home. Dying in a war or getting
injured is considered a courageous act by society. Society doesn't know what the soldiers go
through. If you were a soldier your outlook on war may be a little different. The injuries are so
horrible and the amount ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
By telling them this they believed that when they returned from the war they would be glorified
from their town as war heroes. Kantorek set off some excitement for the war in all of these young
men by doing so. When they reached the front they become conscious that war was no where near
how they imagined it would be. Paul then realized that after a war like this he would not return to
society and be able to fit in ever again. The war totally changed who he once had been. Soldiers go
home and don't know how to act around their families, and the people they grew up with. They have
seen so much death and violence that they don't know what a lifestyle or friendship is. Life is very
different for them. On page 165 Paul says, "I am young, I am twenty years old; yet I know nothing
of life but despair death, fear, and fatuous superficiality cast over an abyss of sorrow." Remarque
adds these thoughts by Paul throughout the book. Paul is over taken by this war and will never be
the same person ever
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All Quiet On The Western Front Analysis
The first world war is taking place. Paul Baumer, a high school graduate from Germany enlists in
the army along with many of his fellow peers. From the beginning of All Quiet on the Western Front
by Erich Maria Remarque, Paul is doomed. This is due to the fact that the conditions of the war are
gruesome, and the war has taken a toll on Paul's mental health. The conditions Paul is exposed after
enlisting in the army are treacherous, and are detrimental to his fate. Paul describes these conditions,
"we see men without mouths, without jaws, without faces; we find one man who has held the artery
of his arm in his teeth for two Orange ders in order not to bleed to death. The sun goes down, night
comes, the shells whine, life is at an end"(Remarque
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All Quiet On The Western Front Humanity Quotes
Brendan Doherty
Mrs. Jackson
Language Arts
19 November 2015
Lost Humanity "We have lost all feeling for one another. We can hardly control ourselves when our
hunted glance lights on the form of some other man. We are insensible, dead men, who through
some trick, some dreadful magic, are still able to run" (Remarque 115). This quote shows the
thoughts that run through Paul Baumer's mind during a long battle. The quote demonstrates the
stripped sense of humanity and self–control the soldiers have, and the animalistic nature the soldiers
have developed. Throughout the novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, Baumer and the Second
Company become isolated from their humanity, their childhood, and other humans. Becoming
isolated from one's humanity changes a human in drastic ways. "A word of command has made
these silent figures our enemies; a word of command might transform them into our friends"
(Remarque 195). Remarque uses this quote to show how the ones in authority turn the soldiers under
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"On the way we pass a shelled school–house" (99). The Second Company did not get a chance to
have a full school experience, and the tattered, neglected, school building represents the neglected
school experience the group has. The fact that the school building is filled with shells correlates to
the fact that the men's school experience has been destroyed by the war. The Second Company
notice a group of new, freshly polished coffins, which prompts Detering to comment that "They're
for us" (99). Kat reacts strongly to this, as he knows that Detering's comment may be true. The other
men try to joke the thought off, but they know that they are being ordered to throw themselves at the
enemy, and they know the coffins are for them. Tjaden says that they'll "...be thankful if they get so
much of a coffin" (99), saying they'll be lucky if anybody puts any effort into remembering their
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All Quiet On The Western Front Character Analysis
The book All Quiet on the Western Front is narrated in first person by the character named Paul
Baumer, who shares his experiences on the battlefield during the final two years of the war. Paul is a
German soldier who tells the story as he lives it, in the trenches, and on the frontline. Paul is a
compassionate, intelligent and sensitive young man who loves his family more than anything and
enjoys reading and writing poetry on his free time. Throughout the book, these character traits of
Paul vanish because of the horror of the war and the anxiety it brings to him. Paul learns that death
is normal and he becomes unable to grieve over the loss of his friends in the war. Paul becomes
bitter and depressed throughout the war as he is unable to remember how it feels to be happy and
safe. I believe that Paul Baumer is a reliable narrator as he demonstrates a deep knowledge of the
situations and characters in the book. Paul shares nothing but his honest opinions with the audience
about his comrades and experiences in the war. Paul appears to be an honest, genuine person that
wouldn't lie about his experiences in the war. The Characters I liked most of the characters in this
book, but one character that wasn't appealing to me was Corporal Himmelstoss. He is a
noncommissioned training officer who is a petty, power–hungry little man who torments Paul and
his friends during their training. Himmelstoss is extremely cruel to his recruits, forcing them to obey
ridiculous and
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Summary Of All Quiet On The Western Front By Nicolo...
When you do something wrong and you are afraid of the consequences, there is usually one parent
that you would prefer to get scolded by. This is because they are the one that is more lenient or
clement, as opposed to cruel. In "All Quiet on the Western Front" by Erich Maria Remarque and
"The Prince" by Nicolo Machiavelli, the question of whether it is better to be cruel or clement arises.
Machiavelli devises that leaders should strive to be considered clement over cruel for a few reasons.
In the book by Erich Remarque, there is a leader named Himmelstoss that Machiavelli could dissect
based on the beginning description of him. Machiavelli would determine that Himmelstoss is cruel
because he does not give his troops any mercy and by doing so, has garnered their hatred of him.
Machiavelli would determine Himmelstoss as cruel due to the lack of mercifulness he gives to his
subordinates. When Himmelstoss found out that the character Tjaden wet his bed when he slept at
night, instead of giving him a shake down or something similar, a more sinister plan formulated in
his mind, "He hunted up another piss–a–bed ... and quartered him with Tjaden. Himmelstoss put
these two so that one occupied the upper and the other the lower bunk. The man underneath of
course had a vile time. The next night they were changed over and the lower one put on top so that
he could retaliate." (Remarque 46).Himmelstoss' cruelty is highlighted masterfully here. Instead of
simply yelling at Tjaden or making him scrub boots till his hands bled, he devised an atrocious way
of punishment. Further adding to his sense of cruelty, Himmelstoss includes another soldier in an
attempt to demoralize and humiliate both of them.Clemency, even in a small form, can have a big
impact. Too much clemency, and the people run rampant. Too little, and there isn't a people to lead.
Himmelstoss clearly leans more toward one side when he should be seeking a balance between the
two, "Therefore a prince, so long as he keeps his subjects united and loyal, ought not to mind the
reproach of cruelty; because with a few examples he will be more merciful than those, who through
too much mercy, allow disorders to arise..." (Machiavelli 1). What the quote means is that there
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Paul Bauumer's Life
Shortly after the start of WW1, young Paul Baumer was a high schooler with his friends graduating
soon. Flyers and rumors were everywhere about the war, encouraging people to join the German
army. It wasn't until they were being influenced by their teacher's stirring patriotic speeches that
they were really entailed to join. Thus started the beginning of these boys road to the end. After
experiencing ten weeks of brutal training, Paul realized that the ideals of nationalism and patriotism
for which he enlisted are simply empty promises. He no longer believes that war is glorious or
honorable, and he along with his friends live in constant physical terror. When Paul's company
receives a short reprieve after two weeks of fighting, only eighty ... Show more content on
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In the mornings, they watched for stray bullets zooming by from no man's land. At nights, they took
cover as the artillery rained down, landed almost inches from them. The battles fought there ad no
names and seemed to have little overall significance, except for the impending possibility of injury
or death for Bäumer and his comrades. Only pitifully small pieces of land were gained, about the
size of a football field, which were often lost again later. It was often referred that the living soldiers
were old and dead, emotionally drained and shaken. "We are not youth any longer. We don't want to
take the world by storm. We are fleeing from ourselves, from our life. We were eighteen and had
begun to love life and the world; and we had to shoot it to pieces."
The war was nearing its end and the German Army was retreating. In despair, Paul watched as his
friends fell one by one. It was the death of his closest friend and mentor Kat that eventually maked
Paul careless about living. In his final moments he commented that peace was coming soon, but he
didn't see the future as bright and shining with hope. Paul felt that he had no aims or goals left in life
and that their generation would be different and misunderstood. When he died, the situation report
from the frontline stated, "All is Quiet on the Western
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Examples Of Comradeship In All Quiet On The Western Front
During the war, many soldiers may feel as though they are losing their self–identity. Having that one
person they can confide in, who share the same troubles, tends to be one of the few things that helps
them manage the chaos of battle. Thus, camaraderie is the key to survival during the time of war.
The classic war novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, written by Erich Maria Remarque, illustrates
an image of comradeship through the narrator Paul Baumer and his close friend Kat. The scenes
throughout the novel between the two friends show how heavily they rely on one another.
Throughout the novel, comradeship is shown through Paul and Kat's extremely close relationship.
They've developed a very special bond from working so closely together, ... Show more content on
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This is illustrated in the scene where Paul and Kat catch a goose to roast. When considering his
relationship with Kat, Paul says "we don't talk much, but I believe we have more complete
communion with one another than even lovers have. We are two men, two minute sparks of life;
outside is the night and circle of death..... what does he know of me or I of him? Formerly we should
have not have had a single thought in common now, we are so intimate that we do not even speak."
(64) The shared bond that the men have created is very present; moreover, the intimacy the men
share causes them to better understand each other. He knows them so deeply, believing he knows
"their every step and movement; I would recognize them at any distance."(155) Due to the fact that
the men spend most of their time together, camaraderie is what makes them who they are. "I could
almost weep. I can hardly control myself any longer. But it will soon be alright back with Kat and
Albert, this is where I belong."Paul's comrades are the men who inspire and motivate him to fight
for his life, and continue to move forward, even in times of
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The Road Back Analysis
When Eric Maria Remarque released "All Quiet on the Western Front, he was shunned by Germany
as being unpatriotic. This didn't stop Remarque from releasing his second book "The Road Back"
but it did lead to him fleeing Germany, his sister being beheaded and his books being burned by the
Nazi's. Why all this fuss over fiction, unless the Nazi's did not want the German population to see
the truth behind their Glorification of war. The same situation can be seen of the ex–soldier
Siegfried Sassoon, who was placed in a military psychiatric hospital for his anti–war poetry.
The fact that both authors of these texts went to war only strengthens the authenticity of the pieces.
Remarque was a soldier for Germany in the first world war, with some events
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Examples Of Loss Of Innocence In All Quiet On The Western...
In my book, All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque, the most intriguing aspect is
the loss of innocence by the main character, Paul, and his fellow soldiers. This is a recurring thought
that is shown throughout the novel. For instance, when the author writes, "It is not fear. Mean who
have been up as often as we have become thick–skinned" (53). When he says this it is amidst the
noises of explosions and gunfire. It makes it very evident that the soldiers have become used to the
constant racket of war even during the pitch black of night. The author illustrates another example
when he writes, "I was sitting in a dugout playing skat; after awhile I stood up and went to visit
some friends in another dugout. On my return nothing
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Comparing All Quiet On The Western Front, The Wars, and A...
All Quiet On The Western Front, The Wars, and A Farewell To Arms
Any and all events in one's life may change a person profoundly, but the effect may not always be as
expected. For instance, situations of despair may cause feelings of depression and uncertainty to
develop in an individual, as would likely be expected. However, those same situations could
ultimately lead to a sense of fulfilment or enlightenment. In the novels All Quiet On The Western
Front by Erich Remarque, The Wars by Timothy Findley, and A Farewell To Arms by Ernest
Hemmingway, the varying possibilities of the effects of war on an individual are clearly displayed.
In All Quiet On The Western Front, Paul Baumer finds the war has changed not only the way he
views ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
That aspect of his previous life seems unreal and incomprehensible, perhaps even vague because
since he came to the war he feels cut off from his early life. It is as if he has lost the person he used
to be. Not only does Paul feel he has lost himself as he used to be, but he also believes that he would
not be able to recapture his past, even if given the chance: "...these memories of former times do not
awaken desire so much as sorrow...Once we had such desires–but they return not. They are past,
they belong to another world that is gone from us." (Remarque, pg.106). From this quote it is clear
that Paul feels his childhood is out of reach. He has lost his desire to recapture his memories,
perhaps recognising that they may not mean all that much to him now anyway, due to the fact that
he feels he has already lost the world those memories originated from. When Paul returns home on
leave, he realises that it may not be him losing a previous world of memories, rather the previous
world is losing him: "I cannot feel at home amongst these things...There is a distance, a veil between
us." (Remarque, Pg.139). Paul feels out of place when he returns home, reinforcing his fears that the
war has changed him irreversibly. As Paul recognises this occurring change throughout the novel,
his thoughts and actions become reclusive. After killing an enemy soldier in battle, the effects of the
war on his sense of
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Summary Of All Quiet On The Western Front
It was unpredictable. It was unsanitary. It caused many soldiers to lose their hope and their lives. It
was World War I. The horrors of World War I are shown clearly in Erich Maria Remarque's All
Quiet on the Western Front. Paul Baumer is the protagonist, he is just a regular young man who has
not had any major life experiences, until he enlists in the war. He goes from just a regular
unexperienced teenage boy to a mature adult in a short time. This novel is set in WWI behind the
German frontlines where Paul and his friends Katczinsky, Muller, Kropp, Tjaden, and Kemmerich
are all assigned. These six young men decided to enlist in the army because their school teacher
Kantorek pressured them into supporting their country and going to war. At first, the young men had
a feeling of patriotism but later figured out that Kantorek completely misguided them about what it
would be like when they got there. The lies eventually caused the men to hate and resent the
schoolteacher that deceived them and make them wish they never enlisted in the first place.
Remarque uses dramatic irony, and suspense to portray the detachment and problems with emotions
in this novel. Baumer begins to realize that nothing good is going to come out of this war, and that
nothing will ever be the same again while going home on leave and visiting Franz Kemmerich's
mother. Paul decides to take it upon himself to tell Mrs. Kemmerich about his death to ease her
worry. **Mrs Kemmerich who was deeply
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Horror of War Exposed in Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet...
Horror of War Exposed in Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front
Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front is one of the greatest war novels of all time.
It is a story, not of Germans, but of men, who even though they may have escaped shells, were
destroyed by the war. The entire purpose of this novel is to illustrate the vivid horror and raw nature
of war and to change the popular belief that war has an idealistic and romantic character. The story
centers on Paul Baümer, who enlists in the German army with glowing enthusiasm. In the course of
war, though, he is consumed by it and in the end is "weary, broken, burnt out, rootless, and without
hope" (Remarque page #).
Through Baümer, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In these dangerous moments, anybody would have gone mad, have deserted their post, or have
fallen. it takes a special kind of soldier –– a soldier who will not go to pieces at the sight of a
mutilated body –– to deal with this emotional abuse; it takes a soldier like Baumer.
Baümer has "grown accustomed to it. War is the cause of death like influenza and dysentery. The
deaths are merely more frequent, more varied and terrible." He has rid himself of all feelings and
thoughts. His emotions lie buried in the earth along with the soldiers who fell prey to them. His
dullness protects him from going mad at the sight of a slaughtered comrade or butchered friend. He
wants to live at all costs so "every expression of his life must serve one purpose and one purpose
only, preservation of existence, and he is absolutely focused on that" (page #). The cost of life is the
death of his emotions; his survival depends on it." Every shell that falls, every shot that fires, a
soldier must face the possible certainty of death. To Baumer, death carries hand grenades, a bayonet
and a rifle to take away what he has long protected –– his life.
Whenever he looks into the eyes of an enemy soldier, he does not see a man, but sees death staring
back at him. He has no choice; the enemy cannot and will not coexist with him. It
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Examples Of Comradeship In All Quiet On The Western Front
All Quiet on the Western Front All Quiet on the Western Front is a novel by Erich Maria Remarque,
a German veteran of World War I. The book describes the German soldiers' extreme physical and
mental stress during the war, and the detachment from civilian life felt by many of these soldiers
upon returning home from the front sets a theme for the story around comradeship. Throughout the
novel there are many examples of what comradeship is truly about. Being in a war changes, people
makes them grow not only as a person, but together causing unforgettable bonds. The book All
Quiet on the Western Front written by Erich Maria Remarque, is something that i think Mr.Makela
should continue having his ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Filled with longing for home, when cherry trees are in bloom, he deserts. After his capture, he is sent
before a field tribunal and never heard from again.
Kantorek (KAHN–tow–rihk) The hometown schoolmaster, a chauvinistic sloganeer, who fills his
students' heads with impassioned speeches about duty to the Fatherland and sends them letters that
depict them as "Iron Youth." As a member of the local reserves, he is tormented by his former
student Mittelstaedt, who teams him with the school janitor to demonstrate how poor a soldier
Kantorek turns out to be.
Corporal Himmelstoss A former postman and wartime drill instructor caught up in an illusion of
power, Himmelstoss demonstrates bullying and tyranny, incurring wrath for humiliating two bed–
wetters. At the front, Himmelstoss proves a sorry soldier, requiring Paul's prodding to keep him
from cowering in the trenches during an attack. After the company cook goes on leave, Himmelstoss
assumes the post and redeems himself by rescuing Hair.
Lieutenant Commander of the Second Company, Bertink sets a worthy example for his men, whose
respect he earns. He doles out light punishment for Tjaden and Kropp and demonstrates heroism by
knocking out an advancing
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Character Analysis: All Quiet On The Western Front
"All Quiet on the Western Front" by Erich Maria Remarque is considered a classic novel by many.
The antiwar book is taught and read throughout the world, and it sheds light on the traumas that
World War 1 brought. It shows that war can change a person physically , mentally, and emotionally.
The soldiers of the first World War became the Lost Generation by experiencing the horrors they felt
and saw. In the novel, Paul becomes lost in all of these ways due to the monstrosities of war. During
the novel, Paul progresses a great deal emotionally. In the beginning of the book, Paul is "crammed
with vague ideas which gave to life, and to the war also, an ideal and almost romantic character"
(Remarque 10). This shows that he is happy and almost looking forward to the war. Later in the
book, Paul says "We were eighteen and had begun to love life and the world; and we had to shoot it
to pieces" (Remarque 39). Paul has realized what war is, and is not satisfied with his situation in life,
which can be attributed to the things he has seen. Towards the end of the story, Paul says "I know
nothing of life but despair, death, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the beginning he is part of a "class of 20 young men, many of whom proudly shaved for the first
time before going to the barracks" (Remarque 10). Paul is in prime condition, he is well kept and
clean during the start of the story. Towards the end of the story Paul has physically changed. Paul
says "We are now emaciated and starved. Our food is bad and mixed up with so much substitute
stuff that it makes us ill" (Remarque 125). He is becoming more decrepit everyday with the
increasing lack of food and supplies. Towards the end of the book we learn that "He fell in October
1918" (Remarque 133). Paul has died, which is probably the biggest physical change one could
have. However severe physical changes Paul endures, the mentality shift he undertakes is perhaps
the most important change of them
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Examples Of Imagery In All Quiet On The Western Front By...
In the book All Quiet on the Western Front Erich Maria Remarque uses literary devices such as
metaphors, similes, and imagery to help the reader have a better understanding of what he went
through in the war. On page 70 the recruits are getting attacked by bombs and deadly gas. When
Paul is talking about being bombed and having to use gas masks to breath he says "I climb out over
the edge of the shell–hole. In the dirty twilight lies a leg torn clean off; the boot is quite whole,"
(Remarque 70). This piece of text is an example of imagery because Remarque describes a very
detailed picture of how graphic and traumatizing it was to be in the war. It is very disturbing to look
around and see bloody body parts everywhere, but Remarque does a good
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Symbols In Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet On The Western...
Erich Maria Remarque does a REMARQUEable job placing symbols throughout, one particular one
is the usage of butterflies, in his already powerful text, of All Quiet on the Western Front. In the
middle of waiting for the next bombardment, Paul sees "two butterflies play in front of our trench."
(127). Of course, after witnessing their arrival, all Paul can think is "What can they be looking for
here?" (127). These flying flutterers of fragility are depicted generally as pretty, and lovely, but in
the book they appear in the middle of a chaotic chapter. Not only are the little frivolously flapping
floaters seen playing, they are seen playing in the vastness of nothing, and finally land on nothing
else, but a soldier's remnants. The butterflies
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Analysis Of Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet On The...
All Quiet on the Western Front, written by Erich Maria Remarque, is largely regarded as the best
war novel of all time. In this novel Remarque discloses the hardships of the Western Front of WWI
from the German Perspective. All Quiet on the Western Front is a wonderful book for anyone who is
curious about World War I or anyone who is appreciative of good diction. All Quiet on the Western
Front tells the story of the young Paul Bäumer, a man of 19 years who enlisted with his classmates:
Kropp, Müller, and Leer. Together with a few others, these men formed the Second Company of the
German Army. The story of these young men is a tragic one, full of few laughs and many sorrows.
Throughout the story, the author demonstrates the undying loyalty ... Show more content on
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First, the story shows readers the hardships soldiers endured during World War I in a wonderfully
brutal way. The way Remarque describes certain scenes is enough to make anyone tear up. Second,
the characters are genuine and easy to love. Readers will quickly become emotionally attached to
Paul and the others for the sole reason that the Second Company was comprised of ordinary people
who chose to fight for what they believed in. Anyone who considers themselves a war enthusiast or
someone who simply appreciated good writing should read All Quiet on the Western
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Analysis Of Maria Remarque's All Quiet On The Western Front
Remarque's novel All Quiet on the Western Front is a classic coming of age narrative set in a
treacherous environment. While Remarque may have intended for his novel to be a frank depiction
of the effects of war upon young men, what he achieves is a young man's transition into maturity,
exacerbated by the dangerous setting. Throughout the work, Paul Baumer and his young friends find
themselves in situations they would have encountered regardless of the presence of war. These
include ––but are not limited to–– exploring the dynamics of interpersonal relationships and the
quintessential departing from home. Initially, the young men experience an occurrence one would
typically associate with entering adulthood and leaving childhood behind; departing
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Character Analysis: All Quiet On The Western Front
War is caused by the tension between countries that results in the inevitable loss of human
compassion. In All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque, the instances when the
environment and glorifications of war becomes a mere background, compassion returns to those
who mutually suffer. Unless human interaction is uninfluenced by the idealisms of war, soldiers will
be stripped of their essence as human beings, void of any emotional capacity and hope being unable
to see others as anything more than an enemy. The glorified notion of war and the idea of a heroic
soldier prevents Paul from separating himself from the horrors and trauma of war, therefore the
Frenchwoman fails to connect with Paul on a more organic and emotional level. ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Remarque names the French soldier as to solidify his identity. To further propel Paul's emotional
duress, he learns of Gerard Duval's occupation and family. "'Comrade, I did not want to kill
you...you were only an idea to me before...I see you are a man like me...now I see your wife and
your face and our fellowship...Forgive me, comrade; how could you be my enemy? If we threw
away these rifles and this uniform you could be my brother just like Kat and Albert'" (Remarque
223). Paul realizes that he too is a cause of fear, an abstraction as Duval was to him. The army is
composed of unextraordinary men with no personal reason to hate each other. Long after Duval´s
death, Paul is once again gripped by war and loses his strength to feel; but for the hours that he is
with the dying Duval, Paul connects with him on the basis of common desires and losses. As Paul
talks to Duval, the language is bare and blunt. There is nothing covering or obscuring his thoughts,
which Remarque uses to strengthen Paul's epiphany. Trench warfare rarely allows soldiers to come
face to face with each other, thus the interaction between Paul and Duval touches Paul more deeply
than his interaction with the Russian prisoners. Paul vows to defy what the war forces men to do;
and for both Duval
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Images Of War In All Quiet On The Western Front
The novel "All Quiet on the Western Front" has many images of war and truly demonstrates the
horrors the soldiers experienced. The author constantly provides surreal scenes that make the reader
stop and think about how terrible the war was. One image that lingers in my mind is from the
beginning when the young recruit lost his helmet and when Paul tried to help him and put it back on
his head the boy hugged him. War is happening all around them and Paul shows deep sympathy
towards the young boy. The reader cannot help but feel for the young boy and picture him just
wanting the comfort of another. Another surreal image that lingers in my mind is when Paul is on
leave and loses all feeling and power when he sees his sister and home. He starts
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Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet On The Western Front
Book Review of All Quiet on the Western Front "Mankind must put an end to war before war puts
an end to mankind." During his address to the United Nations General Assembly in 1961, John F.
Kennedy explained how war was an unnecessary and detrimental action to take for means of peace.
This quote exhibits the true values of the protagonist in the novel All Quiet on the Western Front
written by Erich Maria Remarque. The novel All Quiet on the Western Front is a remarkable way to
immerse into the lives of German soldiers during World War One due to the fact the author had
firsthand experience in the life of the war. To put it briefly, All Quiet on the Western Front is
considered the greatest war novel of all time by many sources and critics from all over the world
such as Redakteur Stohr, the Manchester Guardian, Le Monde, the Swedish Academy, and the
Saturday Review. The novel centers on the protagonist, Paul Bäumer, and his encounters while he
and his classmates were enlisted in the German army during World War One. The novel introduces
the many of the main characters in chapter one when the regiment is in line at the cookhouse to get
their evening ration of food. Paul encounters his first experience with death early in the novel when
one of his classmates dies in army hospital after they amputated his leg. In chapter three, the novel
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If Erich Maria Remarque had not served in the German army, the perspective of the book could be
completely different, or the book might not have been written. All Quiet on the Western Front was
written in the late 1920s. The time the book was written shows there was bias from the author in the
book because he had firsthand experiences with World War One. Also, since the book was written
less than ten years after the war ended, the familiarities of the war were still present on his
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All Quiet On The Western Front Analysis
War is Crippling to a Man's Body and Soul
In the novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, Erich Maria Remarque, starting with the epigraph of
the book, defaces the didactic tips that the war burdens Bäumer with, "This book is to be neither an
accusation nor a confession, and least of all an adventure, for death is not an adventure to those who
stand face to face with it. It will try simply to tell of a generation of men who, even though they may
have escaped shells, were destroyed by the war" (1). A variety of books are written about wars,
aggression, and the vast majority of them are full of patriotic pathos and romantic passages. As the
novel's raconteur and protagonist, Bäumer is the focal figure in All Quiet on the Western Front and
fills in as the mouthpiece for Remarque's reflections about war. All through the novel, Bäumer's
internal identity is stood out from the way the war drives him to act and feel. His recollections of the
time before the war demonstrate that he was at one time an altogether different man from the
miserable fighter who now portrays the novel. Bäumer is a caring and naive schoolboy; before the
war, he adored his family and composed poetry. Witnessing the awfulness of the war and the tension
it instigates, Bäumer, as different warriors, figures out how to separate his psyche from his
sentiments, keeping his feelings under control with a specific end goal to save his rational soundness
and survive. With his epigraph, Remarque immediately separates
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All Quiet On The Western Front Rhetorical Analysis
Ashes to Ashes, Trust to Trust All Quiet on the Western Front is a story about the horrors of World
War I from the perspective of a German soldier named Paul. Throughout Paul's service he sees and
does horrible things, becoming disillusioned with the ideals of the German high command and of
world leaders in general. This book makes it clear not only that the generation of boys and men that
were sent out to fight feel betrayed by the previous generation and by their government, but also that
there was a huge gap between the soldiers and everyone else around them. One of the first times that
the book gives any indication of the soldiers' feelings towards the previous generation was very
early on. Paul recalls how he felt after the first death he witnessed, "We had to recognize that our
generation was more to be trusted than theirs" (12). He said this in reference to how the more
hardened troops who had already seen combat made fun of the fresher recruits because to them they
represented the idea of authority. He made it clear that they did not blame the less experienced
soldiers and still trusted them more than they trusted the older generation. ... Show more content on
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He said this in reference to the poor people who he believed knew from the start that the war would
be hard on them. This is just one instance that the soldiers expressed their distrust of the upper class
who they believed were just using the war to further their own goals at the expense of the common
man. Later in the book Paul talked about the rampant disease among the troops that was caused by
the sub–standard food they were receiving, "The factory owners in Germany have grown wealthy;–
dysentery dissolves our bowels." (Remarque
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Summary Of Diction In All Quiet On The Western Front
In the novel All Quiet on the Western Front, author Erich Maria Remarque adopts an exemplary use
of diction and emotion to describe a critical moment in the life of the protagonist, Paul Bäumer, as
he ends the life of the French soldier Gérard Duval. On a "patrol... sent out to discover just how
strongly the enemy position is manned" (209), Paul dives into a shell hole for refuge from the lead
storm above. Trapped, an alarmed Paul is forced to stay in the hole for an extended period of time as
"minute after minute trickles away" (217), all the while fearfully attempting to escape. When the
enemy troops begin to attack, Paul plans what he might do in advance in the event of one of them
falling in the hole and finding him. He ultimately decides to pull his knife out as self–defense. When
an enemy soldier stumbles and falls on top of him, without thinking and merely responding to
survival instincts, Paul stabs the soldier. In that dire scene, Remarque depicts the entire perspective
of war as it evolves for both the reader and the young Paul Bäumer. It is only until Paul (who
represents the entirety of the armies) discovers what he has truly done as he kills and witnesses
Gérard Duval's life slowly drain from the pool of red on his chest, realizing that everybody is a
human, much like himself. Upon the opening of this setting, Remarque develops the sense of
anxiety and awakening. As Paul Bäumer sits in the claustrophobic, watery hole, all he thinks of is
the want of silence
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Plot Summary Of 'All Quiet On The Western Front'
Austin Martinez
Ms. Bailey
World Literature
13 November 2014
All Quiet on the Western Front Plot Summary
The main character of the novel is known as Paul Bäumer, a nineteen year old man. Paul is someone
who could be classified as being sensitive, but his experiences in the war have slowly deteriorated
who he is as a person. A man that once wrote poetry, Paul now has a disconnection with his feelings
due to the bitter reality and horror of war. He can not even feel close to his family members while on
leave. Paul no longers feels as though he is a man, reaching the point of relying on animal instinct to
survive and kill while in combat. Feeling no remorse for those who die, he simply criticizes the
young recruits for not being able to survive, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the midst of the first world war, Remarque served on the western front; during this time period he
was wounded several times. Remarque based the novel on his own wartime experiences, describing
the daily life of a soldier in the trenches and the horrors that they would face each day. No other
book had given such a gruesome, yet realistic telling of the conflict. The primary historical influence
on the author was the war itself in which the novel is based. Further on in his life, Remarque would
go on to become a teacher. After "All Quiet" and its follow–up novel "The Road Back", were
published Germany's Nazi regime saw the stories as unpatriotic, and had Remarque declared no
longer a citizen of Germany. This forced Remarque and his wife at the time to flee Germany and
seek asylum in Switzerland. Afterwards, he immigrated to the United States in 1939 to live until
1948, when Remarque moved back to Switzerland, where he would live out the rest of his
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How Does All Quiet On The Western Front Change
Throughout time, war has changed a person in both physical and emotional ways. In the novel All
Quiet on the Western Front, Erich Maria Remarque strived to write about the true realities of war
which contradicted the common, romantic belief about war. This novel captures and shifts the
audience into a world so different than their home and allows them to almost experience war first–
hand. All Quiet on the Western Front tells the story of a normal teenager named Paul Baumer who
went from a typical school in Germany, to the front lines of World War 1. As we read the story, we
could feel the many changes that Paul experienced, from just arriving at the front, all the way until
his death. Two of many horrific changes that Paul experienced are the ... Show more content on
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This could be seen in many ways, but just the way he described the first bombardment showed how
he had thought of his enemies. When Paul says, "The dull thud of the gas–shells mingles with the
crashes of the light explosives" (Remarque 68), we can clearly get a glimpse of what was going
through his head at the time of the first attack. Paul clearly understood he was being attacked and
knew where he stood in this situation. Paul's entire view on his enemy soon changed after he was
sent to training camp after his leave. He was given the position to guard the Russian prison and saw
many things that would change his view on the enemy forever. This is seen when he says, "a word
of command has made these silent figures our enemies; a word of command might transform them
into our friends" (Remarque 193). These thoughts were brought along when he saw the prisoners
starving and dying every day. The fact that he could relate to this was probably the reason he was so
affected by the prisoners. By the end of the novel, Paul had become a totally different character in
the way that he views his enemies. While in the front, Paul encounters a French soldier named
Gerard Duval in a hand to hand combat situation. Upon killing this man on instinct, Paul
immediately regrets his decisions. Reading the man's letters, treating his wounds, and promising to
send his family money show how Paul really pictures the men he is
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Theme Of Comradeship In Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet...
All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque is a powerful war novel that presents the
theme of comradeship through war. The theme of comradeship embodies the idea that war has
created a bond between the soldiers that is unbreakable and that they are closer than family on the
home front. After Paul returns from his leave, he realizes that his fellow soldiers are the "most
comforting thing there is anywhere"(212). In this quote Paul encounters the idea that his comrades
are closer to him than his own life or family. His experiences in the war are shared by his fellow
soldiers, these experiences cannot be shared with his family, which shows how much closer Paul is
with his comrades than his family. An example that supports the theme
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All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque
All Quiet on the Western Front is a short book, but remarkably deep. More than 50 years after its
jolting prose, haunting poetry, and powerful truths slashed their way into the consciousness of a
worldwide readership, All Quiet still stands at the forefront of a host of novels on that most tragic
recurrence in the history of human experience: war. All the aspects of trench warfare are present–
excitement, boredom, horror, hunger, fear, dirt, alienation, imminent death, futility, to name a few.
All Quiet has a pervasive sense of uselessness, an initially unvoiced but later fully expressed
question of 'Just what is this war about, and why am I being put on the line for it?' The answer is, of
course, nothing, and if All Quiet has but one overriding message, it is that war is awful, and young
people ought not to fight. All Quiet is not a book which glorifies the German war effort, or portrays
soldiers as heroes. In Remarque's own words, it is "an attempt to give an account of a generation
that was destroyed by the war–even those of it who survived the shelling." As such, it is brutal and
confronting, but in the best possible way. Anti–war fiction has seldom been this effective, or this
memorable for that matter.
All Quiet tells the story of Paul Bäumer, a young man who gets talked into joining the German army
by an idealistic teacher. In short, business–like sentences, Paul tells the reader about his experiences
in and around the trenches, plus those of his similarly
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The First World War (WWI) Essay
The Price of Glory: Verdun 1916, written by Alistair Horne, All Quiet on the Western Front, written
by Erich Maria Remarque, and the many letters written by soldiers give several different and similar
views of World War 1. The letters written by the soldiers talk about his or her individual problems
and how they miss and love his or her families. In The Price of Glory: Verdun 1916, Alistair Horne
writes day to day stories about the Battle of Verdun and of soldiers discussing his or her feelings at
that point. Erich Maria Remarque writes in All Quiet on the Western Front about the relationships
between the German soldiers.
In The Price of Glory: Verdun 1916, Alistair Horne writes day to day stories of soldiers discussing
his or her ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
As a source, the letters are both useful and not. The good thing about the letters is that they show
how the soldiers felt about the war and how they were able to deal with the constant fighting and the
conditions they were in. "It goes on from day to day: alternately awful marches and then a whole
day's inactive vegetating; heat and cold; too much to eat and then a long spell of hunger." The
downside is that they do not give an overview of the war or tell the reader what is happening
everywhere else at all times. These letters best convey what the soldiers experienced and felt
because instead of historians writing about what they thought the soldiers experienced, it was the
actual soldiers expressing what they were going through during the war.
In All Quiet on the Western Erich Maria Remarque writes about what German soldiers went through
and about the relationships between one another. In his book, the narrator is a German soldier who
tells the reader a very detailed story about his current days in World War 1. He writes dialogues
between the troops and describes all of the other soldiers. "Close behind us were our friends: Tjaden,
a skinny locksmith of our own age, the biggest eater of the company. He sits down to eat as thin as a
grasshopper and gets up as big as a bug in the family way; Haie Westhus, of the same age, a peat–
digger, who can easily hold a ration–loaf in his hand and say: Guess what I've got in my fist..." . "He
glanced into the dixie. 'The beans look
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Use Of Juxtaposition In All Quiet On The Western Front
Juxtaposition, a literary device in which two or more people, places, or ideas are placed side by side
for the purpose of contrasting them, is frequently used in Erich Maria Remarque's war novel titled
All Quiet on the Western Front to exaggerate the brutal nature of war. Remarque often offsets these
grotesque descriptions with portrayals of nature and everyday beauty, and utilizes this juxtaposition
of war and nature to portray the true horror of war. When Paul Baumer describes the significance of
the latrines and how they provide a distraction for the men from the war, he paints a picture in the
reader's mind of a beautiful carefree meadow filled with flowers and butterflies, but the reader can
infer that danger still lurks at a distance ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This example of juxtaposition serves to show that even though there may be some calm moments in
battle where everything feels as though it's normal, the soldiers can never truly leave the battle. As
the days go by and the death toll rises, Paul Baumer and his comrades still find ways to laugh, such
as the situation with Haie and his driving–bands, and they still find the beauty in the midst of war,
though this optimism will not last for long as the war become more intense with each passing day.
One morning, Baumer notices two butterflies playing in front of their trench, and they eventually
"settle on the teeth of a skull", juxtaposing natural beauty with ghastly imagery (Remarque 127).
Baumer also notices that the birds and larks who were nesting a year ago, their young have all
grown up; the irony behind this is that even animals have been given a chance to grow old and start
families but the soldiers, the young men, are cut down in their prime. Remarque also incorporates
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All Quiet On The Western Front 'And Dulce Et Decorum'
The topic of war is hard to imagine from the perspective of one who hasn't experienced it. Literature
makes it accessible for the reader to explore the themes of war. Owen and Remarque both dipcik
what war was like for one who has never gone through it. Men in both All Quiet on the Western
Front and "Dulce Et Decorum" experience betrayal of youth, horrors of war and feelings of
camaraderie.
While the young men at the ages of eighteen to twenty signed up for the war they believed that they
were going to have a well off time, meanwhile the older generation is betraying them. The men that
came before them do not tell them they are going to see there best friend shot to pieces. Also that
they are going to be stuck for days in tiny trenches running out of food because then they would get
the bodies to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Most soldiers have that epiphany when they know that they are okay because they have these men
around them that are there to help and support them. These men that make it out with or without the
men they came with leave with an understanding of the camaraderie that they did not have starting
out. Paul has just killed a man and as a realization, "Camard I did not want to kill you... but you
were only an idea to me before an abstraction... now for the first time, I see you are a man like me"
(Remarque 223 ). He has gone through so much fighting this war and then to kill this man he finds
that they are equal, they are just fighting for the same reasons. There was no real enemy just an idea
of one. These men have just been gassed and are under attack " Gas! Gas! Quick, boys!–– An
ecstasy of fumbling, fitting the clumsy helmets just in time" (Owen 9–10). These men have to
communicate fast in order to save lives, and if they do not have that togetherness they are going to
lose the men that they desperately need. The camaraderie kicks in when they have to help put on
one's another's mask even if they do not have theres on
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All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque Essay
All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque
"All Quiet on the Western Front" was written in a first person style. The story was told by Paul
Baümer, a nineteen year old student, convinced to enlist with the German army by his schoolmaster,
Kantorek. Along with many of his friends from school, he is trained under Corporal Himmelstoss, a
strictly disciplined commander who dislikes Paul because of his "defiance."
When sent to the front, Paul, along with his other friends, made new friendships that would last
throughout time. His newly made friend/commander, was a man named Stanislaus Katczinsky. As a
man of forty years of age he was a wise old man as well as a friend to the young eighteen and
nineteen year old recruits. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
One day the French came and began shelling the village. While evacuating Paul and his friend
Albert Kropp were injured by gunshot wounds. They were bandaged up and sent on a train back
home.
This ride home took a turn. When Kropp got a fever he was scheduled to be dropped off at the next
stop. In order for Paul to stay with his friend, he had to convince the nurse that he also was sick
from infection. After being dropped off they were taken to a Catholic hospital to be treated. After a
few weeks Kropp's leg is overcome with infection and is amputated at the thigh. After a few more
weeks Paul and Kropp parted, Paul going back to the war and Kropp going home.
Returning to the front was hard for Paul. The days were getting cold and one by one he watched his
friends die. The hardest loss was that of Kat. After Kat had been shot, Paul had to carry Kat to the
nearest dressing station a few miles away. Stopping every few minutes to rest, Paul frequently
checked to make sure that Kat, even with his injury, was ok. When at last Paul reached the dressing
station the nurse told him that Kat was dead. When Paul checked again a small shell fragment had
just penetrated that back of Kat's head. He was still even warm. Kat was the last of Paul's friends to
die in the war. Then, in October of 1918, Paul finally fell. The book describes his death as, "...his
face had an expression of calm, as though almost glad the end had come." The war ended the next
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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All Quiet On The Western Front And Sun Also Rises...

  • 1. All Quiet On The Western Front And Sun Also Rises... Comparison between All Quiet on the Western Front and The Sun Also Rises The two books, All Quiet on the Western Front and The Sun Also rises have a number of differences and similarities. I will address the topics, characters, time periods and writing styles along with my opinion on the two books. The topic of All Quiet on the Western Front describes how a German soldier and his friends, in the middle of World War 1, deal with the stresses of the war and how the soldiers cope with the conditions they are in and the deaths of comrades; these soldiers are also friends. The book also conveys the stresses of coping with civilian life when disconnected from the war. The topic of The Sun Also Rises deals with the stresses that a woman goes through after losing her true love in the war. The themes are different as the stories do not mirror each other as far as the plot goes. However, they are similar in the fact that both stories touch on people managing life. I prefer All Quiet on the Western Front because the author wrote the story from the perspective of the soldier, Paul Baumer and the writing make you feel like ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... All Quiet on the Western Front, most of the main characters are friends who were acquainted with each other before entering the war. The main character describes not only his surroundings but also his feelings throughout the book. In The Sun Also Rises, the characters are similar in the fact that they are also a group of friends. Although there was a similarity, the characters' feelings were not emphasized as much. The author in All Quiet on the Western Front described the characters' in pronounced detail, in reading the book, I felt like I knew each character. In The Sun Also Rises, it was difficult to relate to the characters as they all had different backgrounds and their feelings going through the story were not as in–depth. In addition, the time periods had similarities and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. A Comparison Of All Quiet On The Western Front All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque and actual happenings from the war display many similarities. The book does go much more in depth with the war than any other resource or letter, but there is similarities in everything in the book to any other info about World War 1. Looking from All Quiet on the Western Front to actual happenings in the war you can bring them together and see the similarities in living as a soldier in the trenches, and how the men passed time during World War 1. Life for a soldier in the trenches in WW1 as described in actual letters and as described as in the book sounded very alike. In the book it talks about the human eating rats, trench foot and leaving the dead bodies lying on the ground just for something dry to walk on. "Killing each separate louse is a tedious business when a man has hundreds. The little beasts are hard and the everlasting cracking with one's fingernails very soon becomes wearisome." (Remarque, 1929, p. 75) This is an example in the book that can be connected to real life is when Paul and all the other men are sitting around the fire picking lice out and burning them in a tin. "Since then we have learned better than to be shy about such trifling immodesties." (Remarque, 1929 p. 8) In that sentence Paul is discussing the toilets, or latrines, saying how when he first started using the them they were nasty and it was embarrassing, but now he's comfortable with using them. "I cannot bear to look at his hands, they are like wax. Under the nails is the dirt of the trenches, it shows through blue–black like poison." (Remarque, 1929, p. 15) Paul describes the trench mud as poison, because it is. It caused men to lose limbs, feet and sometimes their lives because it caused gangrene. "The rats here are particularly repulsive they are so fat–––the kind we call corpse–rats." (Remarque, 1929, p. 102) "The trenches could be very muddy and smelly. There were many dead bodies buried nearby and the latrines (toilets) sometimes overflowed into the trenches. Millions of rats infested the trenches and some grew as big as cats. There was also a big problem with lice that tormented the soldiers on a daily basis." (Heirs, 2014). In the article it ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. All Quiet On The Western Front Analysis All Quiet on the Western Front: A Literary Analysis The Author and His Times Erich Paul Remark (most commonly known as Erich Maria Remarque) was born on June 22nd, 1998 in Onsabruck, Westphalia; a town in Germany. He was the son of his mother Anna Maria Stallnecht Remark and his father, Peter Franz Remark, who was a master machinist and a bookbinder. As a young boy growing up in a lower–working class family, he moved houses eleven times between 1898 and 1912 and was called Schmieren, or "Smudge" by his fellow students. He began to write when he was aged sixteen in which he developed a passion for creating stories. Erich eventually attended the University of Münster in 1913 to pursue a career as an elementary school teacher. In 1915, him and other students created a brotherhood focusing on literature. Through this, he created a short story titled "The Lady with the Golden Eyes", an essay called "From the Time of Youth", and a poem which is titled "I and You". All of these were published in the Onsabruck newspaper and sparked Remarque's popularity in the literary culture of the time. After he won an essay contest in 1916, he was spontaneously drafted into the German army as a musketeer. Sadly, his mother died right after he completed basic training in Onsabruck on September 9, 1917. In July of that year, Remarque's fleet advances to Flanders, where the some of the bloodiest fighting was happening in World War I. The effects of trench Warfare took a toll on him and he never truly recovered from when he carried his friend Troske out of enemy fire before he shortly after died of shrapnel wounds on the way to a medic. During a period of five months, the German and the Allied armies fought away eventually creating up to 770,000 casualties. Remarque eventually becoming sprayed with grenade splinters in neck, wrist, and knee, he left the battlefield on July 31. He suffered from PTSD after the war and it took him a year to recover to a decent state, but he was still concealing it through his wit. During this year he wrote an abundance of poems, essays, and sketches and started to get jobs at local posts. From 1920 to 1922, he juggled being an aspiring pianist, a worker in a post, and being an avid writer for his own ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. Escape The War Zone Essay Escape the War Zone The War Zone (Tim Roth, 1999) narrates a story of a fifteen–year–old teenager named Tom, whose life drastically changes right after his family moves from London to a small town with no kith nor kin. Tom considers his new home a prison and develops a strong abhorrence to his father after discovering the latter to have been raping Tom's older sister, Jessie, while Tom's mother prefers not to pay attention to what is happening around, devoting herself to a newborn child. Unveiling the tragedy within the ordinary English family, The War Zone highlights the conflict of reasoning and emotion which appears as a response to the problem of incest and rape. The film's exposition sets a depressing mood from the beginning. The opening tracking shot depicts Tom rushing off the hill along the asphalt road, replaced by a bumpy path which leads to a jail–like house, indicating metaphorical running towards tribulation. Steadily dull weather without any glimpse of sunlight insinuates the apathetic sentiment within the family. Remarkably, Tom's house family has settled on the seashore, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... His endeavor to capture the rape on camera was an attempt to disown the situation and look at it from another side through the camera lens, replacing himself with an impartial observer, an instrument without any feelings and biases. As soon as Tom accessed the evidence, he could not cope with what he had seen, and threw the camera into the sea, denying the true atrocity. Only after Tom discovers that his father had gone too far with his heinous desires and ended up raping Tom's newborn sister, the teenager found the courage to confront his father. However, Tom's hatred waded through his reasoning, so he stabbed his father with a kitchen knife, rushing into the embrace of rage and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. All Quiet On The Western Front Earth Quotes In the novel All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Remarque, the central symbol is the earth. Earth represents life, death and perverse nature. It ties to other symbols such as dirt, ground, trenches, and plants. Earth represents life because it provided protection and shelter to keep the soldiers alive.. Basically, when the soldiers cling on to earth, they are basically clinging on to life because earth provides them with the necessary essentials to be sustain life such as food which gives them life. Earth is the only thing that the soldiers can rely on to keep them alive in the war. (?) Ironically, the earth also represents death because she soldiers who die in the war would be buried underneath in the ground. Earth is where the decrease ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... According to page 55 of chapter 4, it states "In the spasm of terror, under the hailing of annihilation in the bellowing of death of the explosions, O Earth, thou grantest us the great resisting surge of new–won life. Our being, almost utterly carried away by the fury of the storm, streams back through our hands from thee, and we, thy redeemed ones, bury ourselves in thee..." (Analyze quote) The quote is what shows that earth represents life because us what saves the soldiers from possible death. It is so as earth takes on the role of being the soldiers source of life as it is the most crucial thing there is to them in battle to stay alive. The soldiers uses earth to do sustain life, they dig up trenches, find shelter and food which all gives homes keep them alive and on the go. (how does it all keep them alive?) In this quote specially, a bombardment had occurred and the soldiers used the earth to shelter and bury themselves into it. The relationship between the soldiers is just like the relationship between a mother and her child, who protects and nurtures the child. When the child is scare and in a state of terror, the child would rely on the mother to stabilize with this, the mother offers new life to the child just like how the earth offer new life to the soldiers fighting at the front by being place of comfort. This shows how earth represents ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10.
  • 11. Paul Bauumer Quotes In "All quiet on the western front" by Erich Maria Remarque, the main character is Paul Baumer. He is a survivor in the world war I. The first quote explains who Paul is to the war. „We march up, moody or good–tempered soldiers – we reach the zone where the front begins and become on the instant human animals." P. 56. This quote explains that Paul and his group, are soldiers who are trying to reach the zone, complete their mission and to survive. Paul sheds his soft, gentle, listening self and adopts a killing, shouting, aggressive demeanor which he continually links to that of a hungry or wounded animal. The second quote shows how soldier's mission looks like. "There were thousands of Kantoreks, all of whom were convinced that there was only ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. Betrayal In All Quiet On The Western Front Has there really ever been a time in your life when everything has been all quiet? No matter who you are, there is always something on your mind, or something that you have to deal with. There is really only one way to achieve absolute quiet, and that is by death. War unfortunately gives millions of people just that. All Quiet on the Western Front is a book that tells a story of young men and their journey throughout WW1 from the German perspective. Three main points of war that will be mentioned in this paper are betrayal, horror, and friendship. To begin with, betrayal was a very prevalent theme in All Quiet on the Western Front. Firstly, an example of betrayal was when the soldiers were given nice new uniforms to address the Kaiser, but ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... First of all, the passing down of the boots was a great example of friendship. With each passing of the pair of boots came even more memories that are shared. It was also like a traditional type of thing among the soldiers. Also, another time when a tremendous amount of friendship was shown was when Bertinck stopped the flamethrowers. He sacrificed his own life to save the lives of his fellow squad mates. Lastly, when Paul carried Kat all the way back to the dressing station was a great example of friendship. Paul did not care what he had to do to make it back to the dressing station to save Kat. It was a long and tedious walk for him but they got there eventually. Unfortunately a piece of shrapnel hit Kat in the back of the head that was unseen, and he died. Thus, friendship was probably one of the most important things to have during ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. All Quiet On The Western Front Essay All Quiet on the Western Front Essay We learn about past wars in history. We hear stories from soldiers that partake in these wars, but do we really understand what goes on out on that battlefield? We would have to see and experience it ourselves to fully grasp why soldiers come back so scarred. Not only physically but emotionally, and socially as well. All quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque is a story told by a soldier named Paul Baumer. He shares his experiences of his service in World War one. The realities of the war and the death that surrounded Paul Baumer were so epic that he didn't even feel like he was himself when he visited home. Dying in a war or getting injured is considered a courageous act by society. Society doesn't know what the soldiers go through. If you were a soldier your outlook on war may be a little different. The injuries are so horrible and the amount ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... By telling them this they believed that when they returned from the war they would be glorified from their town as war heroes. Kantorek set off some excitement for the war in all of these young men by doing so. When they reached the front they become conscious that war was no where near how they imagined it would be. Paul then realized that after a war like this he would not return to society and be able to fit in ever again. The war totally changed who he once had been. Soldiers go home and don't know how to act around their families, and the people they grew up with. They have seen so much death and violence that they don't know what a lifestyle or friendship is. Life is very different for them. On page 165 Paul says, "I am young, I am twenty years old; yet I know nothing of life but despair death, fear, and fatuous superficiality cast over an abyss of sorrow." Remarque adds these thoughts by Paul throughout the book. Paul is over taken by this war and will never be the same person ever ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16.
  • 17. All Quiet On The Western Front Analysis The first world war is taking place. Paul Baumer, a high school graduate from Germany enlists in the army along with many of his fellow peers. From the beginning of All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque, Paul is doomed. This is due to the fact that the conditions of the war are gruesome, and the war has taken a toll on Paul's mental health. The conditions Paul is exposed after enlisting in the army are treacherous, and are detrimental to his fate. Paul describes these conditions, "we see men without mouths, without jaws, without faces; we find one man who has held the artery of his arm in his teeth for two Orange ders in order not to bleed to death. The sun goes down, night comes, the shells whine, life is at an end"(Remarque ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. All Quiet On The Western Front Humanity Quotes Brendan Doherty Mrs. Jackson Language Arts 19 November 2015 Lost Humanity "We have lost all feeling for one another. We can hardly control ourselves when our hunted glance lights on the form of some other man. We are insensible, dead men, who through some trick, some dreadful magic, are still able to run" (Remarque 115). This quote shows the thoughts that run through Paul Baumer's mind during a long battle. The quote demonstrates the stripped sense of humanity and self–control the soldiers have, and the animalistic nature the soldiers have developed. Throughout the novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, Baumer and the Second Company become isolated from their humanity, their childhood, and other humans. Becoming isolated from one's humanity changes a human in drastic ways. "A word of command has made these silent figures our enemies; a word of command might transform them into our friends" (Remarque 195). Remarque uses this quote to show how the ones in authority turn the soldiers under ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "On the way we pass a shelled school–house" (99). The Second Company did not get a chance to have a full school experience, and the tattered, neglected, school building represents the neglected school experience the group has. The fact that the school building is filled with shells correlates to the fact that the men's school experience has been destroyed by the war. The Second Company notice a group of new, freshly polished coffins, which prompts Detering to comment that "They're for us" (99). Kat reacts strongly to this, as he knows that Detering's comment may be true. The other men try to joke the thought off, but they know that they are being ordered to throw themselves at the enemy, and they know the coffins are for them. Tjaden says that they'll "...be thankful if they get so much of a coffin" (99), saying they'll be lucky if anybody puts any effort into remembering their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20.
  • 21. All Quiet On The Western Front Character Analysis The book All Quiet on the Western Front is narrated in first person by the character named Paul Baumer, who shares his experiences on the battlefield during the final two years of the war. Paul is a German soldier who tells the story as he lives it, in the trenches, and on the frontline. Paul is a compassionate, intelligent and sensitive young man who loves his family more than anything and enjoys reading and writing poetry on his free time. Throughout the book, these character traits of Paul vanish because of the horror of the war and the anxiety it brings to him. Paul learns that death is normal and he becomes unable to grieve over the loss of his friends in the war. Paul becomes bitter and depressed throughout the war as he is unable to remember how it feels to be happy and safe. I believe that Paul Baumer is a reliable narrator as he demonstrates a deep knowledge of the situations and characters in the book. Paul shares nothing but his honest opinions with the audience about his comrades and experiences in the war. Paul appears to be an honest, genuine person that wouldn't lie about his experiences in the war. The Characters I liked most of the characters in this book, but one character that wasn't appealing to me was Corporal Himmelstoss. He is a noncommissioned training officer who is a petty, power–hungry little man who torments Paul and his friends during their training. Himmelstoss is extremely cruel to his recruits, forcing them to obey ridiculous and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22.
  • 23. Summary Of All Quiet On The Western Front By Nicolo... When you do something wrong and you are afraid of the consequences, there is usually one parent that you would prefer to get scolded by. This is because they are the one that is more lenient or clement, as opposed to cruel. In "All Quiet on the Western Front" by Erich Maria Remarque and "The Prince" by Nicolo Machiavelli, the question of whether it is better to be cruel or clement arises. Machiavelli devises that leaders should strive to be considered clement over cruel for a few reasons. In the book by Erich Remarque, there is a leader named Himmelstoss that Machiavelli could dissect based on the beginning description of him. Machiavelli would determine that Himmelstoss is cruel because he does not give his troops any mercy and by doing so, has garnered their hatred of him. Machiavelli would determine Himmelstoss as cruel due to the lack of mercifulness he gives to his subordinates. When Himmelstoss found out that the character Tjaden wet his bed when he slept at night, instead of giving him a shake down or something similar, a more sinister plan formulated in his mind, "He hunted up another piss–a–bed ... and quartered him with Tjaden. Himmelstoss put these two so that one occupied the upper and the other the lower bunk. The man underneath of course had a vile time. The next night they were changed over and the lower one put on top so that he could retaliate." (Remarque 46).Himmelstoss' cruelty is highlighted masterfully here. Instead of simply yelling at Tjaden or making him scrub boots till his hands bled, he devised an atrocious way of punishment. Further adding to his sense of cruelty, Himmelstoss includes another soldier in an attempt to demoralize and humiliate both of them.Clemency, even in a small form, can have a big impact. Too much clemency, and the people run rampant. Too little, and there isn't a people to lead. Himmelstoss clearly leans more toward one side when he should be seeking a balance between the two, "Therefore a prince, so long as he keeps his subjects united and loyal, ought not to mind the reproach of cruelty; because with a few examples he will be more merciful than those, who through too much mercy, allow disorders to arise..." (Machiavelli 1). What the quote means is that there ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24.
  • 25. Paul Bauumer's Life Shortly after the start of WW1, young Paul Baumer was a high schooler with his friends graduating soon. Flyers and rumors were everywhere about the war, encouraging people to join the German army. It wasn't until they were being influenced by their teacher's stirring patriotic speeches that they were really entailed to join. Thus started the beginning of these boys road to the end. After experiencing ten weeks of brutal training, Paul realized that the ideals of nationalism and patriotism for which he enlisted are simply empty promises. He no longer believes that war is glorious or honorable, and he along with his friends live in constant physical terror. When Paul's company receives a short reprieve after two weeks of fighting, only eighty ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the mornings, they watched for stray bullets zooming by from no man's land. At nights, they took cover as the artillery rained down, landed almost inches from them. The battles fought there ad no names and seemed to have little overall significance, except for the impending possibility of injury or death for Bäumer and his comrades. Only pitifully small pieces of land were gained, about the size of a football field, which were often lost again later. It was often referred that the living soldiers were old and dead, emotionally drained and shaken. "We are not youth any longer. We don't want to take the world by storm. We are fleeing from ourselves, from our life. We were eighteen and had begun to love life and the world; and we had to shoot it to pieces." The war was nearing its end and the German Army was retreating. In despair, Paul watched as his friends fell one by one. It was the death of his closest friend and mentor Kat that eventually maked Paul careless about living. In his final moments he commented that peace was coming soon, but he didn't see the future as bright and shining with hope. Paul felt that he had no aims or goals left in life and that their generation would be different and misunderstood. When he died, the situation report from the frontline stated, "All is Quiet on the Western ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26.
  • 27. Examples Of Comradeship In All Quiet On The Western Front During the war, many soldiers may feel as though they are losing their self–identity. Having that one person they can confide in, who share the same troubles, tends to be one of the few things that helps them manage the chaos of battle. Thus, camaraderie is the key to survival during the time of war. The classic war novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, written by Erich Maria Remarque, illustrates an image of comradeship through the narrator Paul Baumer and his close friend Kat. The scenes throughout the novel between the two friends show how heavily they rely on one another. Throughout the novel, comradeship is shown through Paul and Kat's extremely close relationship. They've developed a very special bond from working so closely together, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This is illustrated in the scene where Paul and Kat catch a goose to roast. When considering his relationship with Kat, Paul says "we don't talk much, but I believe we have more complete communion with one another than even lovers have. We are two men, two minute sparks of life; outside is the night and circle of death..... what does he know of me or I of him? Formerly we should have not have had a single thought in common now, we are so intimate that we do not even speak." (64) The shared bond that the men have created is very present; moreover, the intimacy the men share causes them to better understand each other. He knows them so deeply, believing he knows "their every step and movement; I would recognize them at any distance."(155) Due to the fact that the men spend most of their time together, camaraderie is what makes them who they are. "I could almost weep. I can hardly control myself any longer. But it will soon be alright back with Kat and Albert, this is where I belong."Paul's comrades are the men who inspire and motivate him to fight for his life, and continue to move forward, even in times of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. The Road Back Analysis When Eric Maria Remarque released "All Quiet on the Western Front, he was shunned by Germany as being unpatriotic. This didn't stop Remarque from releasing his second book "The Road Back" but it did lead to him fleeing Germany, his sister being beheaded and his books being burned by the Nazi's. Why all this fuss over fiction, unless the Nazi's did not want the German population to see the truth behind their Glorification of war. The same situation can be seen of the ex–soldier Siegfried Sassoon, who was placed in a military psychiatric hospital for his anti–war poetry. The fact that both authors of these texts went to war only strengthens the authenticity of the pieces. Remarque was a soldier for Germany in the first world war, with some events ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. Examples Of Loss Of Innocence In All Quiet On The Western... In my book, All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque, the most intriguing aspect is the loss of innocence by the main character, Paul, and his fellow soldiers. This is a recurring thought that is shown throughout the novel. For instance, when the author writes, "It is not fear. Mean who have been up as often as we have become thick–skinned" (53). When he says this it is amidst the noises of explosions and gunfire. It makes it very evident that the soldiers have become used to the constant racket of war even during the pitch black of night. The author illustrates another example when he writes, "I was sitting in a dugout playing skat; after awhile I stood up and went to visit some friends in another dugout. On my return nothing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. Comparing All Quiet On The Western Front, The Wars, and A... All Quiet On The Western Front, The Wars, and A Farewell To Arms Any and all events in one's life may change a person profoundly, but the effect may not always be as expected. For instance, situations of despair may cause feelings of depression and uncertainty to develop in an individual, as would likely be expected. However, those same situations could ultimately lead to a sense of fulfilment or enlightenment. In the novels All Quiet On The Western Front by Erich Remarque, The Wars by Timothy Findley, and A Farewell To Arms by Ernest Hemmingway, the varying possibilities of the effects of war on an individual are clearly displayed. In All Quiet On The Western Front, Paul Baumer finds the war has changed not only the way he views ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... That aspect of his previous life seems unreal and incomprehensible, perhaps even vague because since he came to the war he feels cut off from his early life. It is as if he has lost the person he used to be. Not only does Paul feel he has lost himself as he used to be, but he also believes that he would not be able to recapture his past, even if given the chance: "...these memories of former times do not awaken desire so much as sorrow...Once we had such desires–but they return not. They are past, they belong to another world that is gone from us." (Remarque, pg.106). From this quote it is clear that Paul feels his childhood is out of reach. He has lost his desire to recapture his memories, perhaps recognising that they may not mean all that much to him now anyway, due to the fact that he feels he has already lost the world those memories originated from. When Paul returns home on leave, he realises that it may not be him losing a previous world of memories, rather the previous world is losing him: "I cannot feel at home amongst these things...There is a distance, a veil between us." (Remarque, Pg.139). Paul feels out of place when he returns home, reinforcing his fears that the war has changed him irreversibly. As Paul recognises this occurring change throughout the novel, his thoughts and actions become reclusive. After killing an enemy soldier in battle, the effects of the war on his sense of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. Summary Of All Quiet On The Western Front It was unpredictable. It was unsanitary. It caused many soldiers to lose their hope and their lives. It was World War I. The horrors of World War I are shown clearly in Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front. Paul Baumer is the protagonist, he is just a regular young man who has not had any major life experiences, until he enlists in the war. He goes from just a regular unexperienced teenage boy to a mature adult in a short time. This novel is set in WWI behind the German frontlines where Paul and his friends Katczinsky, Muller, Kropp, Tjaden, and Kemmerich are all assigned. These six young men decided to enlist in the army because their school teacher Kantorek pressured them into supporting their country and going to war. At first, the young men had a feeling of patriotism but later figured out that Kantorek completely misguided them about what it would be like when they got there. The lies eventually caused the men to hate and resent the schoolteacher that deceived them and make them wish they never enlisted in the first place. Remarque uses dramatic irony, and suspense to portray the detachment and problems with emotions in this novel. Baumer begins to realize that nothing good is going to come out of this war, and that nothing will ever be the same again while going home on leave and visiting Franz Kemmerich's mother. Paul decides to take it upon himself to tell Mrs. Kemmerich about his death to ease her worry. **Mrs Kemmerich who was deeply ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. Horror of War Exposed in Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet... Horror of War Exposed in Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front is one of the greatest war novels of all time. It is a story, not of Germans, but of men, who even though they may have escaped shells, were destroyed by the war. The entire purpose of this novel is to illustrate the vivid horror and raw nature of war and to change the popular belief that war has an idealistic and romantic character. The story centers on Paul Baümer, who enlists in the German army with glowing enthusiasm. In the course of war, though, he is consumed by it and in the end is "weary, broken, burnt out, rootless, and without hope" (Remarque page #). Through Baümer, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In these dangerous moments, anybody would have gone mad, have deserted their post, or have fallen. it takes a special kind of soldier –– a soldier who will not go to pieces at the sight of a mutilated body –– to deal with this emotional abuse; it takes a soldier like Baumer. Baümer has "grown accustomed to it. War is the cause of death like influenza and dysentery. The deaths are merely more frequent, more varied and terrible." He has rid himself of all feelings and thoughts. His emotions lie buried in the earth along with the soldiers who fell prey to them. His dullness protects him from going mad at the sight of a slaughtered comrade or butchered friend. He wants to live at all costs so "every expression of his life must serve one purpose and one purpose only, preservation of existence, and he is absolutely focused on that" (page #). The cost of life is the death of his emotions; his survival depends on it." Every shell that falls, every shot that fires, a soldier must face the possible certainty of death. To Baumer, death carries hand grenades, a bayonet and a rifle to take away what he has long protected –– his life. Whenever he looks into the eyes of an enemy soldier, he does not see a man, but sees death staring back at him. He has no choice; the enemy cannot and will not coexist with him. It ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. Examples Of Comradeship In All Quiet On The Western Front All Quiet on the Western Front All Quiet on the Western Front is a novel by Erich Maria Remarque, a German veteran of World War I. The book describes the German soldiers' extreme physical and mental stress during the war, and the detachment from civilian life felt by many of these soldiers upon returning home from the front sets a theme for the story around comradeship. Throughout the novel there are many examples of what comradeship is truly about. Being in a war changes, people makes them grow not only as a person, but together causing unforgettable bonds. The book All Quiet on the Western Front written by Erich Maria Remarque, is something that i think Mr.Makela should continue having his ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Filled with longing for home, when cherry trees are in bloom, he deserts. After his capture, he is sent before a field tribunal and never heard from again. Kantorek (KAHN–tow–rihk) The hometown schoolmaster, a chauvinistic sloganeer, who fills his students' heads with impassioned speeches about duty to the Fatherland and sends them letters that depict them as "Iron Youth." As a member of the local reserves, he is tormented by his former student Mittelstaedt, who teams him with the school janitor to demonstrate how poor a soldier Kantorek turns out to be. Corporal Himmelstoss A former postman and wartime drill instructor caught up in an illusion of power, Himmelstoss demonstrates bullying and tyranny, incurring wrath for humiliating two bed– wetters. At the front, Himmelstoss proves a sorry soldier, requiring Paul's prodding to keep him from cowering in the trenches during an attack. After the company cook goes on leave, Himmelstoss assumes the post and redeems himself by rescuing Hair. Lieutenant Commander of the Second Company, Bertink sets a worthy example for his men, whose respect he earns. He doles out light punishment for Tjaden and Kropp and demonstrates heroism by knocking out an advancing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. Character Analysis: All Quiet On The Western Front "All Quiet on the Western Front" by Erich Maria Remarque is considered a classic novel by many. The antiwar book is taught and read throughout the world, and it sheds light on the traumas that World War 1 brought. It shows that war can change a person physically , mentally, and emotionally. The soldiers of the first World War became the Lost Generation by experiencing the horrors they felt and saw. In the novel, Paul becomes lost in all of these ways due to the monstrosities of war. During the novel, Paul progresses a great deal emotionally. In the beginning of the book, Paul is "crammed with vague ideas which gave to life, and to the war also, an ideal and almost romantic character" (Remarque 10). This shows that he is happy and almost looking forward to the war. Later in the book, Paul says "We were eighteen and had begun to love life and the world; and we had to shoot it to pieces" (Remarque 39). Paul has realized what war is, and is not satisfied with his situation in life, which can be attributed to the things he has seen. Towards the end of the story, Paul says "I know nothing of life but despair, death, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the beginning he is part of a "class of 20 young men, many of whom proudly shaved for the first time before going to the barracks" (Remarque 10). Paul is in prime condition, he is well kept and clean during the start of the story. Towards the end of the story Paul has physically changed. Paul says "We are now emaciated and starved. Our food is bad and mixed up with so much substitute stuff that it makes us ill" (Remarque 125). He is becoming more decrepit everyday with the increasing lack of food and supplies. Towards the end of the book we learn that "He fell in October 1918" (Remarque 133). Paul has died, which is probably the biggest physical change one could have. However severe physical changes Paul endures, the mentality shift he undertakes is perhaps the most important change of them ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. Examples Of Imagery In All Quiet On The Western Front By... In the book All Quiet on the Western Front Erich Maria Remarque uses literary devices such as metaphors, similes, and imagery to help the reader have a better understanding of what he went through in the war. On page 70 the recruits are getting attacked by bombs and deadly gas. When Paul is talking about being bombed and having to use gas masks to breath he says "I climb out over the edge of the shell–hole. In the dirty twilight lies a leg torn clean off; the boot is quite whole," (Remarque 70). This piece of text is an example of imagery because Remarque describes a very detailed picture of how graphic and traumatizing it was to be in the war. It is very disturbing to look around and see bloody body parts everywhere, but Remarque does a good ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. Symbols In Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet On The Western... Erich Maria Remarque does a REMARQUEable job placing symbols throughout, one particular one is the usage of butterflies, in his already powerful text, of All Quiet on the Western Front. In the middle of waiting for the next bombardment, Paul sees "two butterflies play in front of our trench." (127). Of course, after witnessing their arrival, all Paul can think is "What can they be looking for here?" (127). These flying flutterers of fragility are depicted generally as pretty, and lovely, but in the book they appear in the middle of a chaotic chapter. Not only are the little frivolously flapping floaters seen playing, they are seen playing in the vastness of nothing, and finally land on nothing else, but a soldier's remnants. The butterflies ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. Analysis Of Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet On The... All Quiet on the Western Front, written by Erich Maria Remarque, is largely regarded as the best war novel of all time. In this novel Remarque discloses the hardships of the Western Front of WWI from the German Perspective. All Quiet on the Western Front is a wonderful book for anyone who is curious about World War I or anyone who is appreciative of good diction. All Quiet on the Western Front tells the story of the young Paul Bäumer, a man of 19 years who enlisted with his classmates: Kropp, Müller, and Leer. Together with a few others, these men formed the Second Company of the German Army. The story of these young men is a tragic one, full of few laughs and many sorrows. Throughout the story, the author demonstrates the undying loyalty ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... First, the story shows readers the hardships soldiers endured during World War I in a wonderfully brutal way. The way Remarque describes certain scenes is enough to make anyone tear up. Second, the characters are genuine and easy to love. Readers will quickly become emotionally attached to Paul and the others for the sole reason that the Second Company was comprised of ordinary people who chose to fight for what they believed in. Anyone who considers themselves a war enthusiast or someone who simply appreciated good writing should read All Quiet on the Western ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. Analysis Of Maria Remarque's All Quiet On The Western Front Remarque's novel All Quiet on the Western Front is a classic coming of age narrative set in a treacherous environment. While Remarque may have intended for his novel to be a frank depiction of the effects of war upon young men, what he achieves is a young man's transition into maturity, exacerbated by the dangerous setting. Throughout the work, Paul Baumer and his young friends find themselves in situations they would have encountered regardless of the presence of war. These include ––but are not limited to–– exploring the dynamics of interpersonal relationships and the quintessential departing from home. Initially, the young men experience an occurrence one would typically associate with entering adulthood and leaving childhood behind; departing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. Character Analysis: All Quiet On The Western Front War is caused by the tension between countries that results in the inevitable loss of human compassion. In All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque, the instances when the environment and glorifications of war becomes a mere background, compassion returns to those who mutually suffer. Unless human interaction is uninfluenced by the idealisms of war, soldiers will be stripped of their essence as human beings, void of any emotional capacity and hope being unable to see others as anything more than an enemy. The glorified notion of war and the idea of a heroic soldier prevents Paul from separating himself from the horrors and trauma of war, therefore the Frenchwoman fails to connect with Paul on a more organic and emotional level. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Remarque names the French soldier as to solidify his identity. To further propel Paul's emotional duress, he learns of Gerard Duval's occupation and family. "'Comrade, I did not want to kill you...you were only an idea to me before...I see you are a man like me...now I see your wife and your face and our fellowship...Forgive me, comrade; how could you be my enemy? If we threw away these rifles and this uniform you could be my brother just like Kat and Albert'" (Remarque 223). Paul realizes that he too is a cause of fear, an abstraction as Duval was to him. The army is composed of unextraordinary men with no personal reason to hate each other. Long after Duval´s death, Paul is once again gripped by war and loses his strength to feel; but for the hours that he is with the dying Duval, Paul connects with him on the basis of common desires and losses. As Paul talks to Duval, the language is bare and blunt. There is nothing covering or obscuring his thoughts, which Remarque uses to strengthen Paul's epiphany. Trench warfare rarely allows soldiers to come face to face with each other, thus the interaction between Paul and Duval touches Paul more deeply than his interaction with the Russian prisoners. Paul vows to defy what the war forces men to do; and for both Duval ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. Images Of War In All Quiet On The Western Front The novel "All Quiet on the Western Front" has many images of war and truly demonstrates the horrors the soldiers experienced. The author constantly provides surreal scenes that make the reader stop and think about how terrible the war was. One image that lingers in my mind is from the beginning when the young recruit lost his helmet and when Paul tried to help him and put it back on his head the boy hugged him. War is happening all around them and Paul shows deep sympathy towards the young boy. The reader cannot help but feel for the young boy and picture him just wanting the comfort of another. Another surreal image that lingers in my mind is when Paul is on leave and loses all feeling and power when he sees his sister and home. He starts ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet On The Western Front Book Review of All Quiet on the Western Front "Mankind must put an end to war before war puts an end to mankind." During his address to the United Nations General Assembly in 1961, John F. Kennedy explained how war was an unnecessary and detrimental action to take for means of peace. This quote exhibits the true values of the protagonist in the novel All Quiet on the Western Front written by Erich Maria Remarque. The novel All Quiet on the Western Front is a remarkable way to immerse into the lives of German soldiers during World War One due to the fact the author had firsthand experience in the life of the war. To put it briefly, All Quiet on the Western Front is considered the greatest war novel of all time by many sources and critics from all over the world such as Redakteur Stohr, the Manchester Guardian, Le Monde, the Swedish Academy, and the Saturday Review. The novel centers on the protagonist, Paul Bäumer, and his encounters while he and his classmates were enlisted in the German army during World War One. The novel introduces the many of the main characters in chapter one when the regiment is in line at the cookhouse to get their evening ration of food. Paul encounters his first experience with death early in the novel when one of his classmates dies in army hospital after they amputated his leg. In chapter three, the novel ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... If Erich Maria Remarque had not served in the German army, the perspective of the book could be completely different, or the book might not have been written. All Quiet on the Western Front was written in the late 1920s. The time the book was written shows there was bias from the author in the book because he had firsthand experiences with World War One. Also, since the book was written less than ten years after the war ended, the familiarities of the war were still present on his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. All Quiet On The Western Front Analysis War is Crippling to a Man's Body and Soul In the novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, Erich Maria Remarque, starting with the epigraph of the book, defaces the didactic tips that the war burdens Bäumer with, "This book is to be neither an accusation nor a confession, and least of all an adventure, for death is not an adventure to those who stand face to face with it. It will try simply to tell of a generation of men who, even though they may have escaped shells, were destroyed by the war" (1). A variety of books are written about wars, aggression, and the vast majority of them are full of patriotic pathos and romantic passages. As the novel's raconteur and protagonist, Bäumer is the focal figure in All Quiet on the Western Front and fills in as the mouthpiece for Remarque's reflections about war. All through the novel, Bäumer's internal identity is stood out from the way the war drives him to act and feel. His recollections of the time before the war demonstrate that he was at one time an altogether different man from the miserable fighter who now portrays the novel. Bäumer is a caring and naive schoolboy; before the war, he adored his family and composed poetry. Witnessing the awfulness of the war and the tension it instigates, Bäumer, as different warriors, figures out how to separate his psyche from his sentiments, keeping his feelings under control with a specific end goal to save his rational soundness and survive. With his epigraph, Remarque immediately separates ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. All Quiet On The Western Front Rhetorical Analysis Ashes to Ashes, Trust to Trust All Quiet on the Western Front is a story about the horrors of World War I from the perspective of a German soldier named Paul. Throughout Paul's service he sees and does horrible things, becoming disillusioned with the ideals of the German high command and of world leaders in general. This book makes it clear not only that the generation of boys and men that were sent out to fight feel betrayed by the previous generation and by their government, but also that there was a huge gap between the soldiers and everyone else around them. One of the first times that the book gives any indication of the soldiers' feelings towards the previous generation was very early on. Paul recalls how he felt after the first death he witnessed, "We had to recognize that our generation was more to be trusted than theirs" (12). He said this in reference to how the more hardened troops who had already seen combat made fun of the fresher recruits because to them they represented the idea of authority. He made it clear that they did not blame the less experienced soldiers and still trusted them more than they trusted the older generation. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He said this in reference to the poor people who he believed knew from the start that the war would be hard on them. This is just one instance that the soldiers expressed their distrust of the upper class who they believed were just using the war to further their own goals at the expense of the common man. Later in the book Paul talked about the rampant disease among the troops that was caused by the sub–standard food they were receiving, "The factory owners in Germany have grown wealthy;– dysentery dissolves our bowels." (Remarque ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. Summary Of Diction In All Quiet On The Western Front In the novel All Quiet on the Western Front, author Erich Maria Remarque adopts an exemplary use of diction and emotion to describe a critical moment in the life of the protagonist, Paul Bäumer, as he ends the life of the French soldier Gérard Duval. On a "patrol... sent out to discover just how strongly the enemy position is manned" (209), Paul dives into a shell hole for refuge from the lead storm above. Trapped, an alarmed Paul is forced to stay in the hole for an extended period of time as "minute after minute trickles away" (217), all the while fearfully attempting to escape. When the enemy troops begin to attack, Paul plans what he might do in advance in the event of one of them falling in the hole and finding him. He ultimately decides to pull his knife out as self–defense. When an enemy soldier stumbles and falls on top of him, without thinking and merely responding to survival instincts, Paul stabs the soldier. In that dire scene, Remarque depicts the entire perspective of war as it evolves for both the reader and the young Paul Bäumer. It is only until Paul (who represents the entirety of the armies) discovers what he has truly done as he kills and witnesses Gérard Duval's life slowly drain from the pool of red on his chest, realizing that everybody is a human, much like himself. Upon the opening of this setting, Remarque develops the sense of anxiety and awakening. As Paul Bäumer sits in the claustrophobic, watery hole, all he thinks of is the want of silence ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 63. Plot Summary Of 'All Quiet On The Western Front' Austin Martinez Ms. Bailey World Literature 13 November 2014 All Quiet on the Western Front Plot Summary The main character of the novel is known as Paul Bäumer, a nineteen year old man. Paul is someone who could be classified as being sensitive, but his experiences in the war have slowly deteriorated who he is as a person. A man that once wrote poetry, Paul now has a disconnection with his feelings due to the bitter reality and horror of war. He can not even feel close to his family members while on leave. Paul no longers feels as though he is a man, reaching the point of relying on animal instinct to survive and kill while in combat. Feeling no remorse for those who die, he simply criticizes the young recruits for not being able to survive, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the midst of the first world war, Remarque served on the western front; during this time period he was wounded several times. Remarque based the novel on his own wartime experiences, describing the daily life of a soldier in the trenches and the horrors that they would face each day. No other book had given such a gruesome, yet realistic telling of the conflict. The primary historical influence on the author was the war itself in which the novel is based. Further on in his life, Remarque would go on to become a teacher. After "All Quiet" and its follow–up novel "The Road Back", were published Germany's Nazi regime saw the stories as unpatriotic, and had Remarque declared no longer a citizen of Germany. This forced Remarque and his wife at the time to flee Germany and seek asylum in Switzerland. Afterwards, he immigrated to the United States in 1939 to live until 1948, when Remarque moved back to Switzerland, where he would live out the rest of his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 65. How Does All Quiet On The Western Front Change Throughout time, war has changed a person in both physical and emotional ways. In the novel All Quiet on the Western Front, Erich Maria Remarque strived to write about the true realities of war which contradicted the common, romantic belief about war. This novel captures and shifts the audience into a world so different than their home and allows them to almost experience war first– hand. All Quiet on the Western Front tells the story of a normal teenager named Paul Baumer who went from a typical school in Germany, to the front lines of World War 1. As we read the story, we could feel the many changes that Paul experienced, from just arriving at the front, all the way until his death. Two of many horrific changes that Paul experienced are the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This could be seen in many ways, but just the way he described the first bombardment showed how he had thought of his enemies. When Paul says, "The dull thud of the gas–shells mingles with the crashes of the light explosives" (Remarque 68), we can clearly get a glimpse of what was going through his head at the time of the first attack. Paul clearly understood he was being attacked and knew where he stood in this situation. Paul's entire view on his enemy soon changed after he was sent to training camp after his leave. He was given the position to guard the Russian prison and saw many things that would change his view on the enemy forever. This is seen when he says, "a word of command has made these silent figures our enemies; a word of command might transform them into our friends" (Remarque 193). These thoughts were brought along when he saw the prisoners starving and dying every day. The fact that he could relate to this was probably the reason he was so affected by the prisoners. By the end of the novel, Paul had become a totally different character in the way that he views his enemies. While in the front, Paul encounters a French soldier named Gerard Duval in a hand to hand combat situation. Upon killing this man on instinct, Paul immediately regrets his decisions. Reading the man's letters, treating his wounds, and promising to send his family money show how Paul really pictures the men he is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 67. Theme Of Comradeship In Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet... All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque is a powerful war novel that presents the theme of comradeship through war. The theme of comradeship embodies the idea that war has created a bond between the soldiers that is unbreakable and that they are closer than family on the home front. After Paul returns from his leave, he realizes that his fellow soldiers are the "most comforting thing there is anywhere"(212). In this quote Paul encounters the idea that his comrades are closer to him than his own life or family. His experiences in the war are shared by his fellow soldiers, these experiences cannot be shared with his family, which shows how much closer Paul is with his comrades than his family. An example that supports the theme ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 69. All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque All Quiet on the Western Front is a short book, but remarkably deep. More than 50 years after its jolting prose, haunting poetry, and powerful truths slashed their way into the consciousness of a worldwide readership, All Quiet still stands at the forefront of a host of novels on that most tragic recurrence in the history of human experience: war. All the aspects of trench warfare are present– excitement, boredom, horror, hunger, fear, dirt, alienation, imminent death, futility, to name a few. All Quiet has a pervasive sense of uselessness, an initially unvoiced but later fully expressed question of 'Just what is this war about, and why am I being put on the line for it?' The answer is, of course, nothing, and if All Quiet has but one overriding message, it is that war is awful, and young people ought not to fight. All Quiet is not a book which glorifies the German war effort, or portrays soldiers as heroes. In Remarque's own words, it is "an attempt to give an account of a generation that was destroyed by the war–even those of it who survived the shelling." As such, it is brutal and confronting, but in the best possible way. Anti–war fiction has seldom been this effective, or this memorable for that matter. All Quiet tells the story of Paul Bäumer, a young man who gets talked into joining the German army by an idealistic teacher. In short, business–like sentences, Paul tells the reader about his experiences in and around the trenches, plus those of his similarly ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 71. The First World War (WWI) Essay The Price of Glory: Verdun 1916, written by Alistair Horne, All Quiet on the Western Front, written by Erich Maria Remarque, and the many letters written by soldiers give several different and similar views of World War 1. The letters written by the soldiers talk about his or her individual problems and how they miss and love his or her families. In The Price of Glory: Verdun 1916, Alistair Horne writes day to day stories about the Battle of Verdun and of soldiers discussing his or her feelings at that point. Erich Maria Remarque writes in All Quiet on the Western Front about the relationships between the German soldiers. In The Price of Glory: Verdun 1916, Alistair Horne writes day to day stories of soldiers discussing his or her ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As a source, the letters are both useful and not. The good thing about the letters is that they show how the soldiers felt about the war and how they were able to deal with the constant fighting and the conditions they were in. "It goes on from day to day: alternately awful marches and then a whole day's inactive vegetating; heat and cold; too much to eat and then a long spell of hunger." The downside is that they do not give an overview of the war or tell the reader what is happening everywhere else at all times. These letters best convey what the soldiers experienced and felt because instead of historians writing about what they thought the soldiers experienced, it was the actual soldiers expressing what they were going through during the war. In All Quiet on the Western Erich Maria Remarque writes about what German soldiers went through and about the relationships between one another. In his book, the narrator is a German soldier who tells the reader a very detailed story about his current days in World War 1. He writes dialogues between the troops and describes all of the other soldiers. "Close behind us were our friends: Tjaden, a skinny locksmith of our own age, the biggest eater of the company. He sits down to eat as thin as a grasshopper and gets up as big as a bug in the family way; Haie Westhus, of the same age, a peat– digger, who can easily hold a ration–loaf in his hand and say: Guess what I've got in my fist..." . "He glanced into the dixie. 'The beans look ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 73. Use Of Juxtaposition In All Quiet On The Western Front Juxtaposition, a literary device in which two or more people, places, or ideas are placed side by side for the purpose of contrasting them, is frequently used in Erich Maria Remarque's war novel titled All Quiet on the Western Front to exaggerate the brutal nature of war. Remarque often offsets these grotesque descriptions with portrayals of nature and everyday beauty, and utilizes this juxtaposition of war and nature to portray the true horror of war. When Paul Baumer describes the significance of the latrines and how they provide a distraction for the men from the war, he paints a picture in the reader's mind of a beautiful carefree meadow filled with flowers and butterflies, but the reader can infer that danger still lurks at a distance ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This example of juxtaposition serves to show that even though there may be some calm moments in battle where everything feels as though it's normal, the soldiers can never truly leave the battle. As the days go by and the death toll rises, Paul Baumer and his comrades still find ways to laugh, such as the situation with Haie and his driving–bands, and they still find the beauty in the midst of war, though this optimism will not last for long as the war become more intense with each passing day. One morning, Baumer notices two butterflies playing in front of their trench, and they eventually "settle on the teeth of a skull", juxtaposing natural beauty with ghastly imagery (Remarque 127). Baumer also notices that the birds and larks who were nesting a year ago, their young have all grown up; the irony behind this is that even animals have been given a chance to grow old and start families but the soldiers, the young men, are cut down in their prime. Remarque also incorporates ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 75. All Quiet On The Western Front 'And Dulce Et Decorum' The topic of war is hard to imagine from the perspective of one who hasn't experienced it. Literature makes it accessible for the reader to explore the themes of war. Owen and Remarque both dipcik what war was like for one who has never gone through it. Men in both All Quiet on the Western Front and "Dulce Et Decorum" experience betrayal of youth, horrors of war and feelings of camaraderie. While the young men at the ages of eighteen to twenty signed up for the war they believed that they were going to have a well off time, meanwhile the older generation is betraying them. The men that came before them do not tell them they are going to see there best friend shot to pieces. Also that they are going to be stuck for days in tiny trenches running out of food because then they would get the bodies to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Most soldiers have that epiphany when they know that they are okay because they have these men around them that are there to help and support them. These men that make it out with or without the men they came with leave with an understanding of the camaraderie that they did not have starting out. Paul has just killed a man and as a realization, "Camard I did not want to kill you... but you were only an idea to me before an abstraction... now for the first time, I see you are a man like me" (Remarque 223 ). He has gone through so much fighting this war and then to kill this man he finds that they are equal, they are just fighting for the same reasons. There was no real enemy just an idea of one. These men have just been gassed and are under attack " Gas! Gas! Quick, boys!–– An ecstasy of fumbling, fitting the clumsy helmets just in time" (Owen 9–10). These men have to communicate fast in order to save lives, and if they do not have that togetherness they are going to lose the men that they desperately need. The camaraderie kicks in when they have to help put on one's another's mask even if they do not have theres on ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 77. All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque Essay All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque "All Quiet on the Western Front" was written in a first person style. The story was told by Paul Baümer, a nineteen year old student, convinced to enlist with the German army by his schoolmaster, Kantorek. Along with many of his friends from school, he is trained under Corporal Himmelstoss, a strictly disciplined commander who dislikes Paul because of his "defiance." When sent to the front, Paul, along with his other friends, made new friendships that would last throughout time. His newly made friend/commander, was a man named Stanislaus Katczinsky. As a man of forty years of age he was a wise old man as well as a friend to the young eighteen and nineteen year old recruits. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... One day the French came and began shelling the village. While evacuating Paul and his friend Albert Kropp were injured by gunshot wounds. They were bandaged up and sent on a train back home. This ride home took a turn. When Kropp got a fever he was scheduled to be dropped off at the next stop. In order for Paul to stay with his friend, he had to convince the nurse that he also was sick from infection. After being dropped off they were taken to a Catholic hospital to be treated. After a few weeks Kropp's leg is overcome with infection and is amputated at the thigh. After a few more weeks Paul and Kropp parted, Paul going back to the war and Kropp going home. Returning to the front was hard for Paul. The days were getting cold and one by one he watched his friends die. The hardest loss was that of Kat. After Kat had been shot, Paul had to carry Kat to the nearest dressing station a few miles away. Stopping every few minutes to rest, Paul frequently checked to make sure that Kat, even with his injury, was ok. When at last Paul reached the dressing station the nurse told him that Kat was dead. When Paul checked again a small shell fragment had just penetrated that back of Kat's head. He was still even warm. Kat was the last of Paul's friends to die in the war. Then, in October of 1918, Paul finally fell. The book describes his death as, "...his face had an expression of calm, as though almost glad the end had come." The war ended the next ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...