The Effect Of Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet On The Western Front

Words: 639
Pages: 3

The Atrocity of War and the effect it has on soldiers All Quiet on the Western Front, by Erich Maria Remarque, is a classic anti-war novel that provides an accurate account of the distressing experiences through the eyes of a young German soldier, Paul Baumer, in the First World War. In the short story The Things They Carried, by the Vietnam veteran Tim O’Brien,talks about how not only are soldiers lost and destroyed physically, but how it also eradicates the soldiers emotionally, these men are exposed to constant physical danger, as they could literally be blown to pieces. In the poem Suicide in the Trenches by Siegfried Sassoon, addresses how people or commoners tend to romanticize war and how they accentuate the idea of glory, honor, and heroism.
There many chapters of the book, All Quiet on the Western Front, where Paul describes the barbarity of war. At one point one of the soldier's’ friend, Kemmerich, has his leg amputated, and is slowing getting worse, but the thing on their minds is “even
…show more content…
In the short story The Things They Carried, Tim O’Brien elaborates on same idea as Remarque how soldiers don't have time to reflect on a loss of a comrade because “Whenever a man died it was always the same, a desire to get it over with quickly, no fuss or ceremony, and what they wanted to now was to head for a ville and get under a roof and forget what had happened during the night. ”(O'Brien). This emotional disconnect has a hugely destructive impact on a soldier’s humanity, they are being forced to deal with the frequent deaths of their friends.AT this point the soldiers are more worried about their well being and whether or not they will be able to go back home and try or even have the chance to have a normal