All Quiet on the Western Front is by Erich Maria Remarque. This book was an extraordinary war story. Remarque uses excellent words and phrases to describe crucial details of the book. Remarque had first hand experience because he was a German in World War I. So he expresses his opinions through Paul the main character of the book. One of the strongest themes in this book is that war makes man inhuman. From the author's point of view soldiers was often compared to various nonliving objects that were inhuman. The soldiers are compared to coins of different provinces that are melted down and now they bear the same stamp(236). Remarque thinks that the soldiers mind state has been changed from when they were school boys the stamp being the…
Entry #2: Chapters 5-11 Summary: It starts out with Maggie giving birth and Will reminiscing about how he met Emma and hints at conflict at moving back into this town. Then it shifts to Iris’s side of that night where she goes and sees an old war movie, almost reminiscent of the war they’re in right now, and then flirting gets serious with Harry. Maggie dies after giving birth, and Will decides to go to London to help out with people who’ve been hurt because of the war.…
In the novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, the author uses strong imagery and detailed descriptions to convey the horrors of the Great War and their detrimental effects on soldiers from all fronts. Images such as desperation, starvation, trauma, guilt, and camaraderie create a lasting impression on the reader as they are planted in the shoes of German soldiers, fighting and depending upon each other for survival. These themes were the unfortunate reality of life in the trenches, where rival sides are united in the battle of maintaining sanity and preserving life in any way possible. Specific images that have lingered in my mind after reading the novel are the types of brutal weaponry used in warfare. Trench mortars blew the clothes right…
After two weeks of horrific combat, a staggering eighty men of the original 150-man company return. The cook chooses not to give the survivors the leftover rations that were meant for the dead men but after some convincing eventually decides to do so, and the men are treated a large meal. Later, Bäumer and a group of friends friends visit Kemmerich, a former classmate who has recently became an amputee after contracting gangrene. Kemmerich is dying, and Müller, another former classmate, wants to keep Kemmerich’s boots for himself. Bäumer does not consider Müller insensitive; like the other soldiers do, in fact, Müller simply realizes that Kemmerich will no longer require shoes, let alone possessions..…
In All Quiet on the Western Front, the audience gets to see how Paul Baumer represents his generation, also known as The Lost Generation. In chapter 1 Page 11 Paul states, “The wisest were just the poor and simple people. They knew the war to be a misfortune, whereas those who were better off, and should have been able to see more clearly what the consequences would be, were beside themselves with joy.” Paul describes how he and many other people envisioned war to be, they underestimated the severity that would be displayed into this war. Throughout the story, we get to see how Paul's character shifts from a positive-innocent kid to an emotionless and lost man.…
The story is told by an omniscient narrator focusing mainly on the character First Lieutenant Jimmy Cross. Lieutenant Cross is in charge of a company of men who go on daily marches through Vietnam in search for the enemy, their sympathizers and supplies. He often daydreams of a college girl he is fond of back in New Jersey. Mitchell Sanders is the radio and telephone operator and known for being the ladies’ man. Kiowa is a Native American Baptist who carries an Illustrated New Testament with him. He also carries his grandfather’s old hunting hatchet given to him by his father and his grandmother’s distrust for the white man. Dan Jensen practices field hygiene by having with him a toothbrush, dental floss and bars of soap stolen from a hotel while on R&R. Henry Dobbins is a large man who carried extra rations and was excused from searching tunnels due to the size of his frame. He carries the M60, is especially fond of canned peaches, and wears his girlfriend's pantyhose around his neck as god luck. Rat Kiley is the medic, carrying a canvas satchel containing morphine, plasma, malaria pills and various medical supplies and comic books. Norman Bowker is a gentle guy, he keeps a diary with him and carries a thumb from a VC corpse that Mitchell Sanders had cut off and presented to him. Lee Strunk has a…
10. Who is Kantorek? The boys’ schoolmaster who convinced them to go to war because it was the honorable and courageous thing to do.…
The major themes that are found in the book is the pressure of patriotism, shattered dreams, and the tragedy of war. During World War I, joining the military was a patriotic thing to do for one’s country. In the book, Paul and his friends reference their old teacher Kantorek quite a number of times. In chapter one, Paul says that “Kantorek gave us long lectures until the whole of our class went, under his shepherding, to the District Commandant and volunteered” (Remarque 11). Kantorek would encourage all his students to go out to enlist in the German military because they were the “Iron Youth” and because it was a patriotic thing to do. Paul and his friends would end up losing their sense of patriotism during their experience at the Western Front since they feel as if they were pressured to join the German military because of nationalism. Paul believes that the older generation who have him and his friends fight in the frontlines do not understand what they go through on the Western Front. For example, when Paul goes home for a little in chapter seven, a patriotic German man tells Paul how the Germans can win the war. Paul then says that “the war may be rather different from what people think. He dismisses the idea loftily and informs me I know nothing about it” (Remarque 167). Paul believes that time has undeniably changed, but the…
Throughout the entire book, many themes can be discovered by the readers, including patriotism, identity, sacrifice, and many others. However, one theme that appears very oftenly throughout the course of the novel is liberty. In many book, the theme liberty is an advance indication of a plot where the characters fight for liberty. However, in this book, “All Quiet on the Western Front,” the theme signifies the lack of liberty throughout the experiences of almost all of the characters. Paul first learned that it was important to show patriotism inside one’s heart. He was very brave to show loyalty toward his country by deciding to go fight in the war. Soon he realized that war was such a burden with no hope for the future. He had to go through continuous troubles, hide from constant threats. There was no freedom anywhere. His life was chained behind bars, being forced to train hard and sacrifice so much to continuously fight till the very end. This wasn’t just the case for him but all of the other soldiers. For example, when being…
Erich Remarque wrote the book to describe her version of the war, and a few of its effects like hardship with understanding how home can throw all the leftovers away rather than save it or give it away. In the war, soldiers had starved to death. Rather than being killed by bloodshed bullets. Keep in mind that the war was several years long, so throughout this period there was a high risk for starvation. Because of the…
The scenes of the film that encouraged enrolling in the army and the impact enrolling had on family and friends were mainly accurate to what truthfully occurred in WW1. The reasons that men joined the war included the attraction that a soldiers uniform brought to women, they expected it to be a trilling adventure for them, some wished to prove their bravery to their parents, peer pressure from friends, to serve for their country, and for other personal reasons. Friends and family of a man wanting to join the army were deeply affected from this. The departure of the man without their loved ones approving of their decision may have caused family issues. Also the death of the soldier was heart breaking for their loved ones. Although we did not see the reaction of the loved ones in the film, what we did see was the soldiers writing letters and placing valuables in a safe place in their trench which we can imagine will be given to their family and friends. This part of the film may then further lead the viewer on to think about the feelings and devastation rushing through the minds of the soldiers who are about to sacrifice their life’s, loved ones when they hear of the soldiers tragic death.…
The play begins with six young soldiers trying to get some sleep while cramped in a train on its way to boot camp in Biloxi, Mississippi. The main character, Eugene Morris Jerome, is wide-awake and writing observations of his comrades in a journal, which he stubbornly refers to throughout the play as his "memoirs." In his journal he announces the four goals he wants to accomplish before leaving the military: become a writer, fall in love, lose his virginity and not die. As this is going on, the other boys wake up and begin picking on and arguing over each other's sleeping habits, and the comedic exchanges begin. The other soldiers consist of an obnoxious macho type named Wykowski; a tough talking mama's boy named Selridge; an aspiring singer and comedic relief named Carney; a mild yet stubborn intellectual named Epstein; and a sensitive, mediator type named Hennessey. The men are all so different from one another, it's often difficult for them all to get along, but they manage. The banter between the men gives the play a lively sense of what it…
“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.” ~~epigraph…
The chapter is about Tim reflecting on the war and his childhood friend Linda, and how she was dying at a young age. “... the only confirmed kill was an old man who lay face-up near a pig pen…” (O’Brien 214). The quote describes when they were sweeping a village that was hit by an air strike. The only dead body that they found was this old man. They sat him up next to a pig pen and the men in the platoon started to talk to the dead man and they shook his hand, just messing around. This is a way that the men dealt with all of the death that they saw during the war.…
Many men were dying in this camp. May it be from disease or simply lack of supplies the focus of the matter is that they stayed until the end of their lives. They believed in this cause enough to never give up and had pushed through the hardships as much as one possibly could. About half of the men were far too ill for battle. (Doc. A) Every soldier was needed and haven been stricken with illness made every healthy soldier a necessity. Approximately 1800 to 2500 men had lost their lives to the wide spread disease so even the smallest attempt to help fight the war was very much appreciated. (Doc. A)…