Guy De Maupassant was born on August 5th, 1850 at the Château de Miromesnil. He was born to his mother and father Laure Le Poittevin and Gustave de Maupassant. At a young age his parents divorced, he and his brother lived with his mom for most of his life. Laure was highly involved in his life, she is the first person to show him the love for classical literature. As he grew up that love grew stronger and stronger. After he graduated college, he enlisted into the Franco- Prussian War. Although he served, and had other jobs afterwards he was not a very ambitious man. He would rather spend his time and energy writing than doing his job. Many of his stories took place during the Franco-Prussian War. To me his stories were twisted and depressing. His early life was not exactly the easiest of lives. “When Maupassant was 11, his parents separated, and he was brought up by his mother in the picturesque coastal town of Étretat” (Liukkonen).This affects the way he thinks, therefore the way he writes his stories. I also believe that the war had a great effect on his writings. During the time of the war, many aspects of life weren’t exactly joyful. I feel that the way the world around him was depressing, which influenced him to write more depressing stories. “His subjects include war, the Norman peasantry, the bureaucracy, life on the banks of the Seine, the emotional problems of the different classes, and, ominously, hallucination” (Britannica). It could have been a way for
the book MAUS by Art Spiegelman is an amazing book about Spiegelman father’s experience during WW2. The story is told by Spiegelman, as in present time with present events, and the story of WW2 is described as a memory. The main characters in the story for the present time are Spiegelman (author) , Vladek (author’s father), and Mala ( Vladek’s wife). The main characters in WW2 story are Vladek, and Anja (Vladek’s wife during the war). The story takes places in Poland, mid 1930’s to winter 1944. The main conflict Vladek is facing is, he is losing his family along the way throughout the war.
Western Front.” Remarque he explains the horrors of war by gives his knowledge of his days as
Writer of the Count of Mote Cristo, The Three Musketeers, and Twenty Years After. Involved in the literacy movement of romanticism and wrote many historical fiction novels (such as the Count of Monte Cristo). Son of an Aristocrat, early life worked with Louis-Philippe, Duke of Orleans a man who would later be the King of France. Lived the high life spending lots of money on women and built the large mansion know as Chateau de Monte-Cristo.
In the novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, Erich Maria Remarque demonstrates that war changes men in irreparable ways. Paul, the main character of the novel is a compassionate, nice, sensitive guy and his life was changed forever after getting drafted to the front. Remarque paints the picture that Paul, once a totally different person before the war, changed into a numb, dispassionate man. Paul loved his family and wrote poetry, but the war changed him “It is strange to think that at home in the drawer of my writing table there lies the beginning of a play called “Saul” and a bundle of poems” in the way needing to keep certain warming and enlightening feelings at bay in order to keep his mind straight to survive in the horrific war (19).
Guy de Maupassant lived from 1850-1893. He was in Paris when he was born and when he died. Maupassant also lived most of his life in Paris. While he lived there he got inspiration for many stories. Maupassant was very aware of what was going on in Paris during the time he wrote The Necklace. “His stories strikingly captured various aspects of day-to-day life in France during that time” (Bio. Maupassant ¶1). Most of what he wrote was based off of real events making the story a reality. He knew of the moral issues at the time and he addressed
The author effectively makes war more realistic and understandable for those of us who have never fought. One of the best techniques he uses is creating personable characters, who are interesting and relatable. These stories show the actual effects of the war on the soldiers and that they’re real people. The book does not contain all fighting, shows actuality, and is heroless, as compared to other war stories. The author creates attachment to the characters and an emotional and hilarious ride for the reader. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this
Later on he commits the crime of shooting an arab man, whom was the brother of his friends ex-partner. Yet again he showed no emotion whatsoever even after what he did. Since he had already had a bad reputation for not mourning his mother’s death, not feeling sorry for killing a man made it all worse. No one felt pity for him whatsoever, not even his lawyer who was suppose to be on his side. Meursault is considered a threat because of his lack of moral feelings www.sparknotes.com. He is found guilty and sentenced to prison, where in time he learns to accept himself, and his way of viewing life, and for the first time feels happy.
In the novel All Quiet on the Western Front a special relationship exists between the author and the novel itself. Research notes that Erich Maria Remarque turned all of his life experiences into his writings, and that the novel is said to have sentimental insight to Remarque’s thoughts and feelings (“Remarque, Erich Maria” - Encyclopedia.com). Remarque, author of the novel All Quiet on the Western Front, portrays himself in his writings through the situations he places his characters in and those characters’ thoughts and reactions to the situations.
Being in the war himself, Remarque has encountered the abhorrences of it firsthand. He has seen individuals bite the dust and the battering that his kindred companions and fighters took to the point he developed PTSD. In his novel, he was attempting to pass on his musings on war to the subjects of Germany and in the end America and different nations. This is a hostile to war novel which depicted the cruelty of the war in courses, for example, themes, images and the immaculate fierceness that has been depicted in the novel.
The theme of the meaninglessness of war is found throughout Remarque’s novel, accompanied by the feelings of hopelessness of the soldiers when they realize it. The novel conveys that after fighting for so long, a soldier begins to realize that the killing is futile and results only in unnecessary deaths. The deaths on the Western Front were often in vain, because no territory was every really gained or lost during the front’s battles. The doubt of the soldiers and their purpose can be seen in Kropp’s words, when he ponders the morality of war: “We are here to protect our fatherland. And the French are over there to protect their fatherland. Now who’s in the right?” (page 203).
One of the bestselling books out of the 1920’s is All Quite on the Western Front. It gives us a look at how brutal and horrifying the war was in that period of time. Describing two stories, the book the precisely chronicles the thoughts of a soldier in World War I (WWI) while simultaneously describing the horrors of all wars. It does not try to make any of its chapters seem unrealistic to the audience for example, each account is not only a separate experience, but a new representation of the fighting. Like all other books, it tells the depth and how it took a great toll on how the world perceived the war. Before, everyone had this romantic theme almost on how the war had such great love stories and its semi-horrifying experiences that had brought them back together. This book has the horrifying tragedies on how a soldier’s life really was in the 20’s. How it took the soldiers emotional and psychical being to a whole new level. The war is seen through the eyes of Paul Baumer (the main character). His mindset is more superior than his comrades’, but to take on a godly role that he takes to serve as the connections between WWI and all past and future disorders. He represents all man and through him the reader comes to see such human struggle.
Henri Rousseau, born in May 21, 1844, was a self-taught artist who started his artistic career when he was forty. He began his life working as a clerk, then he joined the French army after being accused of stealing money from his employer. He later moved to Paris and obtained a job working for the French Customs Office, and it was there that he began painting part-time. It was really this background of his that allowed his paintings to be original and uninfluenced by traditional painting techniques. Since he was a self-taught artist and had no significant experience with painting, he had the freedom to paint as he perceived and as he imagined. Henri Rousseau was a man who liked to exaggerate his life to make himself seem adventurous and exciting. He made up stories about his time in the military and overstated his importance in the Customs office where he worked. This was also reflected in his artwork where manipulated the painting to emphasize beauty and excitement.
Novels published after a major war are often the most deeply emotional, profound ruminations on human nature. The authors of these novels were once soldiers, living in fear and enduring sleepless nights. These authors channel their experiences and emotions into their work, often creating masterpieces of literature. A Farewell to Arms is one such novel. Its author, Ernest Hemingway, was in the Italian ambulance corps in World War I, much like the protagonist of A Farewell to Arms, Frederic Henry. The themes in A Farewell to Arms reflect his mentality and the typical soldier’s disillusionment in the institutions and values he had always held close. A Farewell to Arms explores the far-reaching disillusionment that seems to plague Frederic. The theme of Frederic Henry’s disillusionment of all that he believes in appears through his desertion of the war, the deterioration of his relationship with Catherine, and his thoughts on life.
The nineteenth century French writer, Guy De Maupassant, tells an intriguing story in "The Necklace." He depicts the painful life of a beautiful woman, unhappily born into an average family of clerks. She felt that she was destined to marry into wealth but sadly found herself settling as she married an average copyist. Unlike the women of today, women in the nineteenth century were not fortunate enough to have a career of their own; they were either born into a wealthy family or married a man with money. In "The Necklace", Guy De Maupassant creatively reveals Mathilde Loisel's dreams of a decadent lifestyle. As her struggles start to unravel, it becomes obvious that her heartache is solely
He writes in a language, and he uses a lot of metaphorical features. We as readers are very confused about the way he has chosen to describe the story, but we are also very fascinated by the action. So whole this short story tells us that he has had a tragic life and how he helps others achieve a good life and you can say here that he has a good point.