Erik Brandt is a 16 year old half Russian half German boy. He is in a program called Jungend which is also known as Hitler's Children Army. It is like Boy Scouts for German Kids. They boys in the Jungend are also enlisted soldiers who have to fight when it is needed. One day Erik is sent to fight in the war. He is shipped to the eastern front where the Germans have to fight Russia on Russian soil. Erik is uncomfortable because he is half Russian and German. He was aware of the things Germans were doing to Jews but he was convinced it was right and that Jews were preventing Germany's world domination. While traveling to Russia he becomes acquainted with some other boys in his platoon named Oskar, Jakob, and Fassnacht. They get attacks by aircraft and very few of the Germans die but the boys are pretty scared. When they reach their destination they go into the trenches and prepare to fight. Their commander explains the plan and teaches them how to use certain equipment like mines and grenades. When the first waves of Russians attack it is mainly infantry foot soldiers. The Germans win and Erik thinks it’s over and he is exhausted and tired. Then their commander says that was the easy one and tells them to prepare for tanks to start progressing. In the second wave the Germans start to drop and German hope looks lost. Erik is hit by a grenade and he is hurt. He is lying in pain in the bottom of a trench. With many dead bodies around him, he sees that playing dead won’t help because the Russians are stabbing every body they find with a bayonet. He knew he was running out of time. To his luck a tank broke down over him. He now has to think fast. He sees a dead Russian boy and puts on him uniform to disguise himself. He leaves the trench disguised as a Russian. As he is going he get shot by a surviving German in the side. He passes out and wakes up in hospital. When the soldiers he meets asks his name he says he has amnesia. He meets a young nurse in…
Call of duty: Black ops II is a new game that is coming out in November. There are a lot of people that are looking forward to this game. This game appeals to many people in many different ways. The main purpose of this billboard is to see as many copies of this Activision game as possible. The company Activision has been around for many years and they have been making tons of games and many continue to make them for many years. Activision uses ethos, pathos and logos in there advertisement to affectively sell their product.…
This paints the horrible reality of war by restating the fact that their walking ground is a shit field. O’Brien uses personification to show that soldiers are nearly identical by having the same motives and witnessing the same gruesome images of bloody corpses and missing limbs or the heartache of losing a close friend. The idea of dead bodies everywhere and literal shit underneath their feet “seemed to erase identities, transforming the men into identical copies of a single soldier,” they are not only having to spare their emotional peace of mind by entering the threshold of war, but the conditions could not be any worse (O’Brien 1). They are so extremely mistreated that they basically turn off, they become robots following what their leader tells them and taking lives without a thought in mind that the enemy is human and has a family. The soldiers have to put a brave foot forward and block out gory of blood and the unbearable pain of gunshot noises that pierce through the sky.…
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…
I think that the first section of the book is very well written, and you really do get the sense that the author knew what was happening on the wide-scale. In some books, the author can only focus on 1 small element, whereas the introduction to this gives a broad sweeping overview of so many different things - many of which made it into the movie; the new Air-Cavalry concept, the emphasis placed on small-unit and larger-unit training exercises, the command structure being shifted to allow for the loss of leaders, the President's idea not to declare a state of emergency, and then the background of the conflict in Vietnam, including troop movements by the North Vietnamese forces, the tactics they used, and a look at their equipment.…
When the soldiers first got there, they were nervous because it was their first time fighting in a war. Everything was new to them. When Jenkins died, they got hit with the harsh reality of war. After the sorrow from his death had passed, they joked around with each other all the time and were carefree. They did not realize that everything they did had a consequence that could lead to them going home or not. A Vietcong questioned Peewee and Peewee told him accurate information about himself and almost got killed. The soldiers were all so young and inexperienced so they panicked when something bad happened and ended up making a mistake. Richie missed a mission, so he went with a different squad to do what they were assigned. The soldiers were so frantic that they accidentally fired on their own platoon and killed more than a dozen American soldiers. As the novel progressed, the soldiers gained more experience and learned how to handle situations better when under pressure. Perry’s squad went on a pacification mission and said, “They were supposed to think we were the good guys… I didn’t like having to convince anybody that I was the good guy… We, the Americans, were the good guys” (112). They could not comprehend that anyone would think that the Americans were not trying to help. When the village burning happened, all of the men were confused as to why anyone would do such disturbing things like cutting off a baby’s head. During that time, Richie faced his first face-to-face encounter with a Vietcong that almost shot Richie. When an icky situation actually happens, one forgets all of his/her training and panics and/or draws a blank. Richie ends up going to the recovery hospital because he was injured and he loved the experience. It was calm and relaxing. Although Perry completely dreaded going back to his squad from the recovery hospital, he was thankful that he got a “break” from the war.…
It describes the combat in Vietnam, and ends with the return home of a soldier that appears to be suffering for the shellshock and exposure to the deadly chemical agent orange, which was sprayed over troops from aircrafts.…
When Charley first joins he finds life boring in Fort Snelling. The food tastes horrible and he does not even have a proper uniform. All they do is practice using their guns, and most the time they just shoot blanks to preserve the ammunition. That is until they start they journey southeast. Charley sees pretty girls and every person they walk by his cheering for them. Eventually Charley even gets to ride a luxury train with food that tastes much better than what he got at Fort Snelling. Everything seems fun and the soldiers think they will easily defeat the rebels.…
First of all, the Devon High School students aren’t used to what war is really like, which causes them to underestimate it. Leper goes into war to see what it’s like, and he comes back completely insane. He is insane because he saw the war firsthand. “They were going to give me a discharge, a Section Eight discharge. A Section Eight discharge is for the nuts in the service, the psychos, the Funny Farm candidates” (165). Leper knows that others consider him insane, and he has invited Gene over to prove to himself that he is not. Some students join the war for fun, even though they would be astonished at what it is actually like. Even Gene was skeptical about joining the war because of what happened to Leper.…
The author, Tim O’Brien, is deployed into the Vietnam war when he is a young man. Throughout the novel, the effects of the war on him are shown and they are profound, he has seen death and suffering; he has he seen death but he has also been the cause of it. He describes everything in the war and the effect that it had on him personally and how it continues to affect him in the present. In the beginning of the novel, O’Brien describes everything the other soldiers carry with them. This is his way of showing that the war is personal to everyone. Based on what each of the soldiers carry with them, he is able to understand their fears and what is important to them. This concept is demonstrated when O’Brien says, “It was very sad, he thought. The things men carried inside. The things men did or felt they had to do.” This quote exemplifies the impacts of war on a person’s individualism by saying that during strife, people only did what they thought they had to in order to remain alive. Their own thoughts and ideas mattered less than surviving. Throughout the novel, especially when the author speaks of the present day, it is clear that he is still affected by what he experienced Vietnam War. He is continually influenced by the death and horror that he experienced. His own personal trauma, including when he was shot, impacts his present life as a veteran. The effects of the war on him…
Many men were destroyed by the war mentally. The Soldiers that survived the war and came home almost all had PTSD and were mentally ill from what they had seen or experienced. (Chapter 5, pg.87) "The war has ruined us for everything” This quote means that what they have seen and done in the war has transformed them into only being able to think of and understand the life of war. War becomes what they live and breath and cannot comprehend with other jobs that do not relate to war and the horrifying killing that they were trained to do. Paul was destroyed by the war when he was in a shelling whole and an enemy jumped into it with him and Paul stabbed…
Evoked by the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1992, the Bosnian War is a clear representation of ethnic conflict gone horribly wrong. Spanning from 1992 to 1995, it demonstrated on of the worst displays of mass ethnic cleansing in Europe since World War II. Mainly perpetrated against Bosniaks by the Serbs, the Bosnian War left the country of Bosnia in ruins and left millions displaced and thousands killed. John Moore’s Behind Enemy Lines portrays the final days of the war as an American navigator attempts to get out of dangerous enemy territory. Due to the fact that this film focuses on the experiences of US soldiers and that slight differences are made between this movie and the historical event, the connections between the two are not always very…
The fear of being ashamed is a great motivator to everyone at war in this book. The men were drafted for war but most did not want to fight. Some men would run away but others didn’t want to be a coward and feel ashamed for their family so they would stay and head off to war. This leads to misguided decisions in the war and makes it very dangerous to you and everyone around you. Yet having this can make them wonder if the people near them like them or not. This make Curt Lemon pull his tooth out in…
Choosing one of the case studies that you developed within your group during the class. Explain the cause of the person’s symptoms and construct a hypnoanalysis treatment plan and required outcome.…
programed to hate the rebels and even fight intensely with them at the camp intended on them intolerance society. How the children get mesmerized to think and believe the morals that the commanders have. He is arguing that the war took away his childhood. “Instead of playing soccer in the village square, I took turns at the guarding post around the village” (Page 121) It is so powerful when you have to think about being a programmed child and then coming back into normal society. It is easily comparable to being insane and then attempting to regain your sanity.…