All Quiet On The Western Front By Eric Remarque

823 Words4 Pages

Traumatic experiences in life can cause any person to lose hope. In addition, it can affect someone to lose trust and determination. After being affected by something dramatic, going home is not something to look forward to. All a person wishes is that the experience never happened because now they have to suffer for the rest of their life. In the war novel, All Quiet on The Western Front, by Eric Remarque, Eric exemplifies how the war has affected himself and his loved ones. It caused trauma and mental disorders, which made it difficult to move on from the terrifying experience that has happened. Writers use imagery, irony, and structure to protest war. Writers use imagery to protest war.War is intimidating and terrifying, affecting everyone …show more content…

Usually merry go-rounds are supposed to be childish, meaning fun and enjoyable, but in this the merry go round is being compared to war so it’s horrifying and violent. In addition, throughout war, no matter how safe you think you are, you can die at any moment. “Beside me a Lance Corporal has his head torn off. He runs a few steps more while the blood spouts from his neck like a fountain” (Remarque). Furthermore, there’s more blood than you would imagine. In every area there are dead bodies surrounded by bodies of blood. War is deathly and a tragic experience one wants to go through. Seeing some of your closest friends die in just a bomb or gunshot can make you want to die just as soon as you see that. Continuing, it makes you look at life differently. Makes your mind spiral and makes you wonder why you're even surviving or what you're even doing trying to stay alive. Watching the violence in war makes you realize how good your life was before entering it. It gives an example of how often and quickly people can die and how easily their lives can change within just a letter, forcing them to