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

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Once the bloodshed of two nations falls into the hands of a soldier, that unfortunate man begins to fall apart as his subconscious thoughts change his perspective of the world around him. Throughout the classic war novel, “All Quiet on the Western Front,” Erich Maria Remarque builds up a memorable story about survival in the eyes of a German soldier named Paul Baumer. By the influence of their unified government and their intimate relationship with grown-ups, Paul and his comrades are being taken to the front line to stand and fight for their war-torn country against France. The longer they stay at the front, the more conflicts they tend to face during the time of the Great War. As the novel progresses, Remarque transforms the German Soldiers' perspectives of their glorious fatherland and dear comrades to reveal the hidden side effects of war.

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For example, one of Paul Baumer's friends, Kropp, starts to explain how "in the arena, ministers and generals of two countries [can] dress [themselves] in bathing drawers... with clubs" as they fight for their ruler and he believes that this can be "much simpler and more just than this arrangement, where the wrong people do the fighting" (41). Kropp points out that the government is the root of the young recruitments' unfair lives, where they remain to be unable to make choices. Because of the government, they lose their values of living in a peaceful world. In order to avoid these emotions of being deceived, they try to escape in a nonviolent way without crippling themselves. While their days start to disappear one by one,

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