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Analysis Of All Quiet On The Western Front By Erich Maria Remarque

888 Words4 Pages

Brotherhood, camaraderie, kinship, whatever ever you would like to call it, it is what allows the soldiers of the trench to survive. In warfare the limits of one's mental state, personality, and will to live are push to their absolute extremes. In Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front he depicts the very intense and destructive Great War through the story of a young soldier and his companions. Remarque relays to the reader how brotherhood grants the spirit of a soldier a place to live even within the treacherous confines of war. During a soldier's time on the front they are faced with a type of very particular torture called trench warfare, in which a man’s only saving grace is the brotherhood between his fellow soldiers. During a shelling on the front Paul is caught in a perilous position, where …show more content…

As a gift, and maybe even as Paul’s way of celebrating the return to his brothers, he supplies Kat and Kropp with some potato-cakes and jam from his time on leave. Paul states that he, “Gives the fresh ones to Kat and Kropp,” Kat responds with, “These are from your mother?” Paul nods and thinks to himself, “I could almost weep. I can hardly control myself any longer. But it will soon be all right again back here with Kat and Albert. This is where I belong” (201). By Paul saying that “It will soon be all right again back here with Kat and Albert,” he is proving to the reader how essential it is for him to have his brothers there with him. Not only have his comrades provided stability within Paul’s war torn life, but it has also given Paul the chance to be able to show signs of basic humanity again. Such as selflessness show through the giving up of the good potato-cakes to his comrades. Ultimately what is left of Paul’s stability and spirit is all due to the brotherhood that keeps them

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