Setting is a significant literary feature because it is the root of a work. It depicts the overall meaning and purpose of the novel. The setting determines the way a certain character think, act, or feel. Without a setting, characters in a novel have no reason to act or care which defeats the whole purpose of a novel. In Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front the setting is set during World War II, on the western front. Although it is set in a real place and period of time, the characters in the novel does not exist. Throughout the whole novel, readers witness many gruesome and sickening scenes, “We see men living with their skulls blown open; we see soldiers run with their two feet cut off, they stagger on their splintered stumps
Throughout Erich Maria Remarque’s novel; All Quiet on the Western Front, various stylistic features and language conventions are used in varied scenarios to help express and create a scene for the reader. Remarque specifically focuses his use of metaphorical statements, repetitive language of particular phrases, to slow or speed the pace, or provide a scarring image for and while in small cases, he also provides an insight into how he feels alienated by Germany.
All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque, is a novel illustrating the struggles in World War 1. Paul, whom the novel is based upon, is forced to change his personality to avoid mental damage during war. Paul and his group of friends are altered not only physically, but also mentally. Experiences during war causes them to cast their emotions away to avoid getting hurt emotionally. Paul and his comrades are being shaped by the experiences during war and are beginning to accept that life is fragile. As war drags on, death becomes common enough to become a casual thing for Paul. When Paul goes back to talk to Kemmerich’s mother, he is shock how much pain she is in, “. . . she strikes me as rather stupid all the same. . .Kemmerich
All Quiet on the Western Front is a novel written by Erich Maria Remarque in 1929. The novel is narrated by a young man named Paul who recently graduated from high school and is enlisted in the army during the first world war. During the first five chapters, there are three motifs that are consistent. These include animal instincts, horror, and nature.
The story of All Quiet On The Western Front centers on a young teenager, Paul Baumer the 19 year old German together with his 4 other classmates is persuaded to volunteer for the German army by enlisting at the beginning of World War I and find themselves fighting in the French warfare. The story is told entirely through the experiences of the young German recruits and highlights the tragedy of war through the eyes of an individual, Paul. Erich Maria Remarque creates the world of the ordinary German soldier in the Great War, spanning around late 1916 to just before the armistice of November 11th, 1918. It is a world of slaughter by gas
Remarque uses imagery to foreshadow the coming of massive death and also the death of Paul. On the way to the front the soldiers see “at least a hundred” coffins, which the soldiers know are for them, not the enemies. The readers are able to picture the “yellow, unpolished, brand-new coffins” leaning against the school through the visual imagery. Remarque uses this imagery to foreshadow the coming attack and the death of many soldiers. Remarque also uses the pre-ready coffins to show the expendability of the soldiers; the german leaders were already planning on the soldiers dying. The “brand-new coffins” were used to foreshadow the new recruits in particular dying, because they were not ready to be sent out to the front. The main foreshadowing
Throughout All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque the main character discovers the reality of life in a way that shifts his view of humanity and brings him to realizations that carry him through his experience in war with a new outlook on life that enables him to see the real reason he fights for his country’s people.
Erich Maria Remarque’s “All Quiet on the Western Front” discusses his view of war from a younger generation's viewpoint. Throughout the novel, Remarque describes in detail what it is like to be a soldier in fighting in the war during World War I. Remarque’s writing views the war as unnecessary, cruel, and evil. The images painted by Remarque demonstrates the horror and sacrifices that soldiers have to make when they enter the war. “All Quiet on the Western Front” is not an open anti-war novel. However, the novel has obvious anti-war themes and many people such as the Nazi party, consider “All Quiet on the Western Front” an anti-war novel. Erich Maria Remarque views of war are apparent in the novel “All Quiet on the Western Front” considering the images and demonstrations of horror that the characters have to survive through as well as, the actual reality of who the true enemies are to the soldiers.
Throughout history, war has always been described as an atrocity and an unnecessary reason for the loss of life. This is not the case. War is necessary for the survival of the economy, the sustainability of non-renewable resources, and the progression of inventions.
Although men served in battle in World War I, women also had important roles that sometimes were not as praised as men’s. Certain situations in All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich M. Remarque can be seen as unsupportive of feminism, or the belief of equality of the sexes. Historically, women typically served as the hospital orderlies to care for and heal wounded soldiers in war. Surprisingly, mostly men play the role of the orderlies in All Quiet on the Western Front are men rather than women to do important jobs such as grabbing “[the bodies] as soon as [they] are dead”(Remarque 16). With the men attaining the role of orderlies as opposed to the women, the story is not necessarily in support of the feminist idea of equality between the
World War one was a war of severe tribulation. resulting in over 50 million deaths, it was one of the deadliest conflicts in human history. Known as the “Western Front”, the border of Germany and France was the site to some of the bloodiest battles of the war. There are very few novels that truly exemplify the events that took place along this front. Erich Maria Remarque’s novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, Displays important themes, imagery, and symbolism, that help show how this great war affected the soldiers, the countries involved and the world.
Before the story begins, Erich Maria Remarque writes, “... [All Quiet on the Western Front] will try simply to
All Quiet on the Western Front All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque tells the story of the horror of war and the lasting negative effects it has on the soldiers. It teaches us how attitudes, bodies, and people become broken. By using a series of symbols, Remarque illustrates to the readers how worthless and cheap human life is. Kemmerich’s boots for example, “But as things are now it is a pity that they should stay here; the orderlies will of course grab them as soon as he is dead, "Won't you leave them with us?"
A great loss could mean anything. A great loss could be a loss of innocence, loss of close ones, or a loss of a sense of direction in life after a tragedy. Specifically, these deals of great loss were brought together in the novel, “All Quiet on the Western Front” by Erich Maria Remarque. The novel exemplifies all the loss that war has to bring to a young boy, and his fellow comrades. Paul Baumer, the main character in the novel, joins the war at nineteen years old with his friends from school, thinking that war would be a great honor and nobility, only to find out a difficult way that it was the complete opposite of what they thought. Paul had lost a great amount of his own beliefs, and his friends. He becomes broken and destroyed,
The novel All Quiet on the Western Front written by Eric Remarque is a powerful anti-war novel. It is about a young man of nineteen who fights in the German army at the western front. He is accompanied by his friends and soon realise that war isn’t glorious or honourable, and they live in constant terror. Throughout the novel Remarque describes the physical and psychological horrors of war as well as how they have become the lost generation and the question of who is the enemy. He includes many writing techniques to describe each topic, especially the physical horrors of war.
Throughout the novel, the theme of nature was carried out consistently, along with other lesser themes, in order to correctly acknowledge the literal and figurative meanings of what war was really comprised of. The dignified war novel All Quiet on the Western Front’s author, Erich Maria Remarque, had the intention to depict the idea of nature in sporadic, yet dramatic ways. The soldiers, including the main protagonist, Paul, often reflected on the significance of nature as another type of defense mechanism, in which the beauty and calmness of nature assisted them in restoring their ability to move forward; in their ability to sustain and keep hold of the last shred of humanity in them. Remarque frequently referred to the reoccurring theme in