Tuesday, March 10, 2020
All Quiet On The Western Front Essays - English-language Films
All Quiet On The Western Front Essays - English-language Films    All Quiet on the Western Front       Erich Maria Remarque?s All Quiet on the Western Front, a novel   set in World War I, centers around the changes wrought by the war on   one young German soldier. During his time in the war, Remarque?s   protagonist, Paul Baumer, changes from a rather innocent Romantic to a   hardened and somewhat caustic veteran. More importantly, during the   course of this metamorphosis, Baumer disaffiliates himself from those   societal icons?parents, elders, school, religion?that had been the   foundation of his pre-enlistment days. This rejection comes about as a   result of Baumer?s realization that the pre-enlistment society simply   does not underezd the reality of the Great War. His new society,   then, becomes the Company, his fellow trench soldiers, because that is  a group which does underezd the truth as Baumer has experienced it.       Remarque demonstrates Baumer?s disaffiliation from the   traditional by emphasizing the language of Baumer?s  pre- and post-enlistment societies. Baumer either can not, or chooses   not to, communicate truthfully with those representatives of his   pre-enlistment and innocent days. Further, he is repulsed by the banal   and meaningless language that is used by members of that society. As   he becomes alienated from his former, traditional, society, Baumer   simultaneously is able to communicate effectively only with his   military comrades. Since the novel is told from the first person point   of view, the reader can see how the words Baumer speaks are at   variance with his true feelings. In his preface to the novel, Remarque   maintains that "a generation of men ... were destroyed by the war"  (Remarque, All Quiet Preface). Indeed, in All Quiet on the Western   Front, the meaning of language itself is, to a great extent,   destroyed.       Early in the novel, Baumer notes how his elders had been facile   with words prior to his enlistment. Specifically, teachers and parents   had used words, passionately at times, to persuade him and other young   men to enlist in the war effort. After relating the tale of a teacher   who exhorted his students to enlist, Baumer states that "teachers   always carry their feelings ready in their waistcoat pockets, and trot   them out by the hour" (Remarque, All Quiet I. 15). Baumer admits that   he, and others, were fooled by this rhetorical trickery. Parents,  too, were not averse to using words to shame their sons into   enlisting. "At that time even one?s parents were ready with the  word ?coward?" (Remarque, All Quiet I. 15). Remembering those days,   Baumer asserts that, as a result of his war experiences, he has   learned how shallow the use of these words was.        Indeed, early in his enlistment, Baumer comprehends that although   authority figures taught that duty to one?s country is the greatest   thing, we already knew that death-throes are stronger. But for all   that, we were no mutineers, no deserters, no cowards?they were very   free with these expressions. We loved our country as much as they; we   went courageously into every action; but also we distinguished the   false from true, we had suddenly learned to see. (Remarque, All Quiet   I. 17)       What Baumer and his comrades have learned is that the words and   expressions used by the pillars of society do not reflect the reality   of war and of one?s participation in it. As the novel progresses,   Baumer himself uses words in a similarly false fashion.       A number of inezces of Baumer?s own misuse of language occur   during an important episode in the novel?a period of leave when he   visits his home town. This leave is disastrous for Baumer because he   realizes that he can not communicate with the people on the home front   because of his military experiences and their limited, or nonexistent,   underezding of the war.       When he first enters his house, for example, Baumer is   overwhelmed at being home. His joy and relief are such that he cannot   speak; he can only weep (Remarque, All Quiet VII. 140). When he and   his mother greet each other, he realizes immediately that he has   nothing to say to her: "We say very little and I am thankful that she  asks nothing" (Remarque, All Quiet VII. 141). But finally she does   speak to him and asks, "?Was it very bad out there, Paul" (Remarque,   All Quiet VII. 143).       Here, when he answers, he lies,    
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