In "A Long Way Gone" by Ishmael Beah the author describes his experiences in the Sierra Leone civil war. He faced many challenges, and this affected him in many ways. The Sierra Leone war brought Beah into conflict with his own humanity, specifically his will to live, his empathy, and his trust.…
Throughout history wars have been fought mercilessly and without remorse especially in guerilla warfare. In A Long Way Gone, author Ishmael beah, explains in vivid detail his experience during the war and the horrors it came with. Throughout his journey he tends to see the environment around him fall apart. While it may seem hellish and unforgiving nature itself tries to run from the war. Nature itself does not consider war to be natural since it is driven by murder rather than…
When you enter the military, it is like being born again, and when babies are born into the world, they cry. Within the military, you are forced into a world where you have to adjust or you will not survive long. In the book Jarhead, Anthony Swofford, gives audiences an inside look on his life as a Marine during the Gulf War era. Swofford encounters life changing experiences while serving his time in the Marine Corps. He admits that joining the Marine Corps was a mistake. However, we all learn from our mistakes and Swofford has learned a great deal from his own indeed. Of the many things that he learned was the ability to cry, to be able to cope with the hardship and aftermath of the war. There are many ways to cry. Anthony Swofford found his way to cry by writing this intriguing memoir of his time in the Marine Corps.…
A great novel about war is not one that explains detailed events of violence or gore, but, rather, one that extracts the raw emotions of all who were involved. The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien achieves this perfect balance between truth, empathy, and fiction. American author, Elliot Ackerman, shares that different experiences or events can encapsulate “the war in miniature”. Composed of short stories, each chapter in The Things They Carried could be interpreted as an example of “the war in miniature”. However, the chapter that most eloquently encompasses “the war in miniature” is “How to Tell a True War Story” because it captures the sense of “overwhelming ambiguity” (78) of war, expresses how there is no moral to war, and highlights the importance of relationships made amidst war.…
Over the course of Liam O’Flaherty’s “The Sniper,” the reader experiences what it is like to be in a war. He reveals to the reader the struggles of being in a war, such as the physical trials not to mention the emotional turmoil that…
This paper will argue that in the pursuance of survival the protagonist, Ishmael Beah, must cope with and adapt to the desolate world around him. It takes strength mentally and physically to survive, carry on through hardships, yet it requires beyond this to live, purse a lifestyle, during the war. Conforming to the war that surrounds him Ishmael is choosing to do more than simply survive he is choosing to live as he does the necessary requirements to ensure his body and soul live on. Ishmael’s unconscious goal of living rather than surviving is exhibited through his conformity to his war torn country that surrounds him. Ishmael adapts to life as a child soldier via guns and drugs as a means of survival. Living without his family, Ishmael encourages himself to adapt the war-flawed country by grasping onto memories of the past and thoughts of being reconnected with his family once again. Ishmael experiences situations that he has to acclimatize in order to keep his soul alive.…
War has always been something that seemed pointless to me; it seemed like violence with no other purpose but to harm people. I felt sorry for the people who had to go to war, for the people who died, and for people who could never go back to normal after a war ended, because of the mental or physical impact it had on them. Howard told us his story, his opinion about war, and the book “The Things they carried”. He changed my way of looking at war a lot, partly even my opinion about war.…
War is a very controversial topic for many people. Depending on the person’s outlook on the war, it can be depicted as something good or bad. War brings destruction wherever it goes, whether it is on a place or the people, and it ultimately is inevitable. War also protects a country from having further destruction and keeps the people at home safe from any danger. As a person can see in many recordings of war, there are many comparisons and contrasts that are expressed through soldiers, veterans, and civilians. Some comparisons seen in many of the testimonies given by effected people are dehumanization, dislocation, and alienation; but they also have contrasts that can be seen through nationalism, technological advancements, and the coming home for many…
In the end, war is crucial and hard for many. No two people are alike when it comes to the effects of war. Some have horrible flashbacks imprinted on their minds that only very few can see through. In addition, others have physical wounds that everyone…
. This song is about someone having to live up to the expectations someone else wants for them. They are pressured into having to be exactly like that person. They are nonstop always being smothered, and absolutely hate the fact that they cannot be who they want to be. They eventually get tired of listening to him/her and start living to their own expectations.…
Throughout the song it talks about how school is hard, but it gets better. In the song it says "Filling me up with rules/Ive got to admit it's getting better". Those two lines mean that the school is making too many rules and that the students don't have any freedom, but it gets better. This relates to my 8th grade experience because when I started 8th grade, they had a bunch of rules. Two weeks into 8th grade, the school let 8th grade have more freedom and it got better.…
The history of war is what many spend time reading about in textbooks. Few, however, experience war and all that it encompasses. David Leckie, a marine during World War II, uses his book, Helmet for My Pillow, to share with readers the truth of what it was like to be a soldier. Rather than skimming the surface of his time on Parris Island and the Pacific Islands, he goes into unmatched, excruciating detail; every trench dug, every shot fired, and every fallen soldier passed was recounted by Leckie. Setting this story apart from any other, the first-hand accounts of combat, unlikely descriptions of the day-to-day actions of the soldiers, and the heart that Leckie intertwines with each part of his story all combine to make this thought-provoking,…
Additionally, Ishmael identity was shaped by war. Being in the army made him not scared of the rebels because he was part of a larger group going after rebel bases. Ishmael was thinking about his new life in the army and what he was doing. Ishmael said “ My childhood had gone by without my knowing and it seemed as if my heart had frozen” (126). Suffering from the loss of his family at a young age plus living life with the daily fear of being killed by rebels that caused him to suppress his feelings. When he suppressed his feeling he started to go crazy and thinking about how his parents died.…
This song can and was put to many situations but was most commonly know for the civil rights movement. The song speaks of unity in the face of an adversity. It speaks of the light in everyone whether alone or together and how it can overcome darkness in this case it is segregation.…
Lieder ohne Worte (Song without Words) is written by the Romantic composer Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy. It is a collection of forty-eight short lyrical piano pieces of markedly song-like character that he wrote at various periods of his life between 1809 and 1847. They are well suited to the study of musical form because of their artistic value. Op. 19b, No. 1 Andante con moto in E major was written in 1830 and is the first in the collection. The piece is in the key of E major and modulates from E to B to G major.…