War a malicious way to destroy the younger generations and the older generation not knowing what we are getting into creating horrifying images into the younger generations mind that will stick their forever. Destroying the younger generations and the death of Innocence. The betrayal of the older generation and the lost generation. The betrayal of the older generation saying how great war was going to be and saying how great and all it is when really it is one of the worst ways for man to live. The older generation brought the younger generation to fight in the war instead of the older generation at first. In “Like Toy Soldiers” by Eminem he says “Why would I wanna destroy something I help build It was not my intentions, my intentions were good”(“Like Toy Soldiers” by Eminem). This quote shows the betrayal of the older generations because the younger generation to fight the war and not know why they were fighting this war only fighting for the older generation and the younger generations to come. This relates to Paul Baumer when he starts to think after he kills the printer Paul says “Comrade, I say to the dead man, but I say it …show more content…
Creating all these horrifying images of war creates images in these men that will be there forever and change the men and how they see things forever creating the teens into men. In “Like Toy Soldiers” It say’s “Wouldn't have to about one of worry about one of your people dyin”( “Like Toy Soldiers” by Eminem). This quote is showing how your thinking about all of your comrades and friends dying and never knowing when or if they are going to die. When Paul is going on leave and getting on the train after Kat and Albert say goodbye. Paul “becomes filled with a consuming impatience to be gone”(Remarque 154). Paul has to bare with that he never knows when the last goodbye will be because of how brutal this war is on the men and
In All Quiet on the Western Front, Paul is morphed from an innocent child into a war veteran who has a new look on society. Paul used to have a carefree life where he was able to be a kid, but when he enlisted into the army it all changed. Paul became a person whose beliefs were changed because of the war. Paul doesn't believe in society anymore especially parents, elders, and school, which used to play a big part in his life. He changed his beliefs because society does not really understand how bad war really is and pushed many young men, who were not ready, into the army. Paul connects with his fellow soldiers because they are going through the same situation and
Life for the soldiers in the beginning is a dramatic one as they are ordered up to the frontline to wire fences. The frontline makes Paul feel immediately different as described here. "As if something is inside us, in our blood, has been switched on." The front makes Paul more aware and switched on as if his senses and reactions are sharpened. I think Paul and his friends are
War can be defined as “an active struggle between competing entities. It’s truly hard to tell who is right or wrong during a war. Both sides are fighting for what they believe in and what is true to their heart. In the end there is always two things promised – destruction and death. These two objects can explain the result in every facet of war from the physical to emotional.
War leads to oppression and leaves negative implications on all people and societies by impacting the poor, women, children, and nations as a whole. "War is a state of violent conflict between one or more groups" (Rasenberger 3). Rasenberger defines war as a state of conflict between one group within itself or several groups in combat with each other, what is not mentioned are the after-effects of war. War itself leads to many civilian and military deaths, an estimated 1.5-3.8 million people died during the Vietnam War and an approximate 500,000 people died in the Iraq war. The biggest tragedy of War is that it always results in fatality, but another key, negative, factor to understand is that after the War many adverse implications arise. Post-war ramifications in the nation fall upon the poor, women, and children, making them weaker and less motivated leading to the downfall of a society. Regardless if a nation wins or is defeated in war they have to deal with consequences of war and find solutions to the impacted people and society. It is essential to understand that there is never a true victor in war because regardless of the outcome, fatality and a fall of morale within society on both sides are inevitable. War has often been the solution to situations that required force or violence, but in recent times this has
4. Men of Paul 's age group fear the end of the war because the war has taken up so much of their lives and personalities that they wouldn 't know how to function in a world without the war. They were conditioned to violence and battle. Moreover, they spent quite a few of their formative years in the war, and essentially grew up in combat. Older men in the war have jobs and families to which they can return; Paul and his friends have nothing of the sort. They often joke about becoming postmen like Himmelstoss, solely because they want to best him in his own field. In reality, though, they have no idea how they will operate in the world, even if they escape the war alive.
The young men at the front had a distant relationship that seemed to grow as the war went on. The men that fought at the front became alienated through all of the gruesome scenes they encountered and the problems they faced daily. After just two weeks of battle only half of the men that went to battle with Paul remained at the battle front. Paul along with all of the other soldiers at the front had to see their “brothers” shot and killed or wounded while fighting right by their side. Paul
In All Quiet on the Western Front Paul witness all the horrors of war. He sees death crawling towards the wounded soldiers in the wood, hospital, and on the front. When a soldier was wounded it killed them, they lost a limb or they got sent back to the front. Another awful part of war is soldiers would get shot and stranded out in the woods. They would yell for help, but were never found. Mental wounds were another injury of war. Paul would see people go insane on the front and some soldiers got shellshock. The worst part of the war for Paul was watching all of his comrades die, and his connection with the ones he loved at home fade away. The horrors of war is clearly represented in both Battle Scars and All Quiet on the Western Front with physical wounds, mental wounds, and loss of loved ones.
War is a monster that ends dissension and in its wake it leaves a trail of needless consequences when put to use.
War is a subject that is deeply imbedded in the culture of the United States; this country was founded because of it. The Americans that fight in war are often referred to as heroes and held at a higher social standard than regular civilians. But Chris Hedges has a bleaker view of war and veterans. In his article “War Is Betrayal,” he explains how war is just another way for the elite to prey on the poor and gullible. He argues that rich and powerful do not go into combat, but instead they create an enticing narrative, of honor, experience, and status, that lures weak onto the battlefield. These same people after return from war with mental health problems. While Hedges includes some appeal to credibility in his article, he mainly employs emotional appeals to make his claim.
One way the authors show they are against war is the clash of generations. During the book we see that the younger and older generations have very different views of the war. The younger generation (mostly college students) felt the need to run off and join the war to become the hero they have always dreamed about. The older generation feels as though it is foolish to try to start a war and feel the need to hide and protect themselves. On page 10 it talks about how many college students left to go fight for the war and came back only to brag. On page 6 it talks about the adults opinions on how the war should be handled. Both sides are brought up on the book a significant amount of times making it one of the three biggest themes. The authors feel as though there is a clash of generations during the war showing that they are against the war.
While on leave, Paul also visits his father and some of his father's friends, but does not wish to speak to them about the war. The men are "curious [about the war] in a way that [Paul finds] stupid and distressing." They try to imagine what war is like but they have never experienced it for themselves, so they cannot see the reality of it. When Paul tries to state his opinion, the men argue that "[he] sees only [his] general sector so [he is] not able to judge." These men believe they know more about the war and this makes Paul feel lost. He realizes that "they are different men here, men [he] can not understand..." and Paul wants to be back with those he can relate to, his fellow soldiers. Paul wishes he had never gone on leave because out there "[he] was a soldier, but [at home] he is nothing but an agony to himself." When Paul returns to the battlefield, he is excited to be with his comrades. When he sees his company, "[Paul] jumps up, pushes in amongst them, [his] eyes searching," until he finds his friends. It is then
Paul tried to remember his passion that once made him happy, but it is like he got lost along the way to feel those happy memories again. Instead, soldiers learned to just distract and disconnect their minds from emotional feelings. During a situation towards the beginning of the novel, involve Paul and his friends visiting a former class friend who had a leg amputation. Muller wants his boots, and is seen as being completely insensitive but Paul doesn’t think of him as that. No, instead he sees the whole picture of the situation although Paul reflects that war causes a soldier to isolate oneself from emotions which allow you to grieve, sympathize, and feel hurt.
Yet another example of the brutalization and dehumanization of the soldiers caused by the war occurs during Paul’s leave. On leave, Paul decides to visit his hometown. While there, he finds it difficult to discuss the war and his experiences with anyone. Furthermore, Paul struggles to fit in at home: “I breathe deeply and say over to myself:– ‘You are at home, you are at home.’ But a sense of strangeness will not leave me; I cannot feel at home amongst these things. There is my mother, there is my sister, there my case of butterflies, and there the mahogany piano – but I am not myself there. There is a distance, a
While the disconnection allows the soldier to adapt to the brutal war environment, it inhibits them from re-entering society. When he takes his leave, he is unable to feel comfortable at home. Even if Paul had survived the war physically, he most likely would not have integrated back into society suitably. The emotional disconnection inhibits soldiers from mourning their fallen friends and comrades. However, Paul was somewhat less than able to completely detach himself from his feelings, and there are several moments in the when he feels himself pulled down by emotion. These rush of feelings indicate the magnitude to which war has automated Paul to cut himself off from feeling, as when he says, with unbridled understatement, “Parting from my friend Albert Kropp was very hard. But a man gets used to that sort of thing in the army (p. 269) .”
At first they are proven to be hollow ideas, when the boys are faced with the horrors of war, after another are shown to be incongruent to the propaganda that led the young men into combat in the first place. Paul discovers that the only truth about war is that all parties, enemies and allies, are like me and you, human