Introduction
“All Quiet on the Western Front” is an opposition book set throughout World Conflict I that draws on Remarque’s own experiences in the war to portray the era’s more considerable disenchantment. William Pfeiler is a critique who thinks that this novel is a world sensation (Pfeiler). The book is an account of Paul Baumer’s fighting experiences and his brief military service, and it is primarily concerned with the impact of war on young people. Its title, written in common communiqué terminology, is symbolic of the book’s casual terse tone, which brutally depicts the daily atrocities of war in understated realism. Its failure to take an official stance on war stood in stark contrast to the patriotic rhetoric prevalent at the time, particularly in Germany. Despite its numerous criticisms, the book was an instant international hit. In “All Quiet on the Western Front”, Erich Maria Remarque demonstrates an accurate depiction of war by showing how it impacts soldiers’ lives, the fearfulness of battle, and pride and nationalism for one’s nation.
Impact of Soldier’s Lives
Immediate Physical Impact
Paul Bäumer recalls the generation gap between himself and his parents, as well as the older troops. They had a life before the war, one that was pleasant and safe. But Paul’s generation was never given the opportunity to live that life. Even from the start of the novel, Paul had only experienced death, horror, terror, misery, and pessimism. He and his colleagues are just nineteen and twenty years old, respectively. Because of their wartime experiences, they have no feelings, no faith, and no hope for the future.
Immediate Mental Impact
Paul and his friends become so inured to death and horror all around them that the inhumanity and atrocities of war become part of everyday life. Marie Rose Napierkowski thinks that this is great about depicting the horror of war (“All Quiet on the Western Front”). Here is where Remarque is at his greatest: in his description of the true horror and paralyzing fear at the front. He describes the atrocities, the terrible consequences of weapons of mass destruction, and how soldiers become hardened to death and its onslaught of sensory perceptions during battle.
Future Physical Impact
Paul and his friends hypothesize on what it could contain from time to time. Paul can’t think of everything that would be worth lying here in the mud for, and he views everything as perplexing and dismal. His comrade Albert, who would wind up in a hospital with his leg severed, believes that the war has wrecked everything for them. Kropp, another trooper in their company, recognizes that they will not be strong enough to pull twenty months of bullets and drop bombs like an old blanket. When they were eighteen, they were just beginning to enjoy their lives as grownups, but the war chopped that lifestyle brief.
Future Mental Impact
When Müller continually confronts his pals about their future intentions, the younger guys can only provide hazy responses. Adult people discuss their careers and families; they had a distinct identity and social responsibilities prior to the conflict. Younger males, such as Paul and his peers, lacked such defined identities. They joined the battle while they were approaching adulthood, and as a result, they developed identities as soldiers. Modris Eksteins is a critique who believes that the best aspect of Remarque’s work is how he told about the sensitivity of soldiers (Eksteins). Paul is unable to see any specific postwar objectives. Numerous young guys like him cannot see the conflict as a passing fad in their life. Their wartime experiences have been so traumatic that the notion of working in a postwar atmosphere fills them with dread. Harmony signifies the uncertain; battle, whatever dreadful it is, provides them with some tiny consolation due to their close acquaintance with it. Whereas they know how to operate as soldiers, Paul and his fellow young colleagues are unable to envisage working in civilian occupations (Tofil). They have no adult experiences that do not include a daily struggle for survival and health.
Fearfulness of battle
Inevitability of death
Remarque presents the troops in “All Quiet on the Western Front” as men who are continually on the run from murder. His assassination signifies the end of a generation of young people from his community who reflect the demographic crisis as a whole. Because chance is the essential component of a soldier’s life, it is capitalized. It is up to chance whether a bullet strikes a man in the precisely correct position to kill him or not. It’s also possible that a person was just in the wrong location at a bad moment. This is paradoxical because Paul is assassinated on the same day, indicating that everything was not calm. There is ongoing combat, and soldiers on both sides are dead.
Soldier’s reluctance to fight
As Paul and his buddies discuss opponents, they do not include the soldiers on the other side. Consequently, they direct their rage onto Kantorek and Himmelstoss, their bosses and compatriots. Kantorek, and other once trusted authority figures like him, are seen by Paul and his classmates as the source of their meaningless misery. They were sent to battle under the tragically erroneous impression that they would be starting on a thrilling trip to fight for honour and respect. They consider all ordinary troops, regardless of national background, who are obliged to battle in the ditches to be sufferers. When Paul sees the Soviet captives, he finds it difficult to accept that they are his foes—they are only adversaries because of the words of their respective commanders (Remarque and Wheen). Because of disagreements among more powerful figures, Paul and the Soviets are driven to kill and maim each other, despite the fact that they have more in mind than their separate masters.
Disastrous Amounts of Violence and Growth in Firepower
Poisonous gas, the rocket launcher, and trench warfare were technological and martial advances that transformed fighting during World War I. Remarque masterfully embellishes how these developments rendered the war messier, more complex, and more expensive. Military improvements nearly always make troops’ lives riskier, while medical innovations lag far behind. Kemmerich, for example, dies as a result of complications from a relatively minor wound (Remarque and Wheen). In the fight, glory and heroism cease to be logical aspirations since modern technology restricts the impact that an individual officer can have on the struggle and polarizes him from the repercussions of his conduct.
Pride and Nationalism for One’s Nation
False Hope
Paul and his companions get so accustomed to death and suffering that the inhumanity and crimes of war become second nature to them. Here is where Remarque excels: in his portrayal of the actual terror and paralyzing fear at the beginning. He portrays crimes, the horrifying implications of nuclear weapons, and how warriors become accustomed to mortality and the barrage of sensory experiences during the war.
Atrocities are unavoidable in the terrible business of war. In Chapter 6, Paul and his troops come across soldiers who have had their noses hacked off, and their eyes stabbed out with saw bayonets. Their throats and nostrils are filled with shavings, causing them to suffocate. The troops fight back like insensible animals as a result of their continual view of death. They cut faces in half with spades and stab weapons into the backsides of any enemies who are too sluggish to flee. Their callousness contrasts with the emotions of the new members, who sob, shake, and succumb towards the front craziness portrayed in images from the front.
Causes Tension Around the World
“All Quiet on the Western Front” was one of several books destroyed by the Nazi Party after Hitler assumed power, due to its depiction of disillusioned German troops and its perceived poor portrayal of Germany. Paul is transformed from a harmless youngster to a military veteran with a fresh perspective on humanity. Paul used to live a carefree existence where he could be a kid, but that all changed when he enrolled in the army. Because of the conflict, Paul became someone whose beliefs had shifted.
Soldier’s Patriotic Duty
Paul comments on how the gung-ho nationalist ideas he was indoctrinated crumbled as he became more embroiled in actual battle. Those who encouraged him to enrol stated that fighting for their nation was a noble cause, and they pretended to appreciate the troops. However, Paul believes that the essence of combat is demeaning to troops since it demands them to debase themselves utterly (Remarque and Wheen). He believes that he and his colleagues are not illustrious defenders of their homeland but simply political pawns of their masters.
Paul laments the fact that the media in his native country promotes a sanitized, upbeat view of the conflict to the public. The news portrays the troops as merry heroes on a magnificent adventure, battling in the ditches and celebrating in the camps afterwards, in an effort to instil nationalist pride and general trust in the war effort. Because the population is disconnected from the realities of the conflict, this nationalist fiction is conceivable, and those in power take advantage of that lack of information.
Service
Paul often fantasizes about his lifestyle before the wartime, but he realizes he will never be able to return to it. The conflict has decimated an entire generation of young people, leaving them emotionally and physically crippled and being unable to reintegrate into their previous life (Remarque and Wheen). Even if they escape the battlefields, what they have seen and experienced there has forever changed them. When Paul returns to his home village on leave, he feels the most shocking repercussions of this transition. Despite the fact that the town hasn’t changed, Paul feels entirely at home there. His previous passions in literature and art, as symbolized by the bookcases in his boyhood dormitory, now appear infantile and imaginary. He is estranged from his parents and previous professors, who want him to play the brave former soldier.
Honour
Remarque sprinkles a redeeming quality: honour, among all the horrible images of death and inhumanity. People giggle when Paul and his buddies kidnap Himmelstoss and beat him up because he deserves it, and they’re just doing him justice. Nonetheless, as time passes, the images of friendship alleviate the horrific stories of front-line attacks and death, and they create brilliant light in such a dreadful gloom. When a rocket is launched, and blasts ensue, a teenaged recruit gets gun-shy. He creeps over to Paul and covers his forehead in Paul’s chest and shoulders, and Paul assures him lovingly, gently, that he will grow accustomed to it.
Integrity
When Paul encounters captive enemy prisoners, he recognizes the capricious reality of war. These are individuals who have caused him no harm. When no one battling has been mistreated, whether someone is their adversary is determined only by a formality. This is the myth of nationalism: murdering two strangers over a parcel of land is a sign of pride. In actuality, their murders might have been avoided with a simple gesture of a hand or a touch of a pen, rendering their contribution basically pointless.
Summary
“All Quiet on the Western Front” is an anti-war novel set during World Conflict I that draws on Remarque’s own experiences in the war to depict the era’s greater disillusionment. Erich Maria Remarque accurately depicts battle by illustrating how it affects soldiers’ lives, the terror of conflict, and passion and patriotism for one’s country. Their wartime experiences were so painful that the prospect of working in a postwar environment filled them with fear. Harmony represents the unknown; combat, no matter how horrible it is, gives them some sliver of solace owing to their intimate knowledge of it. The novel is a nationalist myth: killing two strangers over a plot of land is a badge of pride. In reality, their killings might have been prevented with a simple wave of a hand or a stroke of a pen, making their participation essentially meaningless. Critics perceive this work differently, but everyone finds some advantages and disadvantages.
Works Cited
“All Quiet on the Western Front.” Novels for Students, edited by Marie Rose Napierkowski, vol. 4, Gale, 1998, pp. 1-18. Gale eBooks. Web.
Eksteins, Modris. “All Quiet on the Western Front and the Fate of a War.” Contemporary Literary Criticism, edited by Sharon R. Gunton, vol. 21, Gale, 1982. Gale Literature Criticism. Originally published in The Journal of Conternporary History, vol. 15, no. 2, 1980, pp. 345-365. Web.
Pfeiler, William K. “Remarque and Other Men of Feeling.” Contemporary Literary Criticism, edited by Sharon R. Gunton, vol. 21, Gale, 1982. Gale Literature Criticism. Originally published in war and the German Mind: The Testimony of Men of Fiction Who Fought at the Front, Columbia, by William K. Pfeiler, University Press, 1941, pp. 140-152. Web.
Remarque, Erich Maria, and A. Wheen. All Quiet on the Western Front. Little, Brown and Company, 1975. Web.
Tofil, Ashley L. “Psychological Effects of War in All Quiet on the Western Front.” 2017. Web.