Character Analysis: All Quiet On The Western Front

1151 Words3 Pages

All Quiet on the Western Front: Analytical Essay
1. All Quiet on the Western Front is an anti-war novel. Discuss
Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front provides insight on the horrors of World War One through the eyes of a young soldier, Paul Baumer. Baumer is not shown as a hero, yet as one of many soldiers who experienced the death, destruction and agony on the famous front, whilst giving an account of what all soldiers witnessed and had to face during a time of turmoil and war. Remarque presents All Quiet on the Western Front as an anti-war novel through Baumer’s encounters with enemy soldiers, radical patriotism and Baumer’s lost connection with the rest of the world.

Paul loses sight of why he is fighting the enemy after …show more content…

Paul eventually receives leave and returns to home to his family in their little German town. He soon realises that he can’t connect the same way he used to with his family as a “a great gulf has opened up between then and now” (pg. 116) and “can’t find any real point of contact” (pg. 117). He struggles to have a conversation with his own family and has “no real relationship with [his father] any more” (pg. 114) because his father is only interested in war stories. Paul “can’t get back, [he’s] locked out” (pg. 119) from his own life and it becomes evident he doesn’t enjoy his leave and has a “terrible feeling of isolation” (pg. 119) that separates him from the rest of the world. Whilst being at the front, Paul and his friends question, “what will become of [them]” (pg. 60) when they return home. They become aware of the fact that their older comrades “Kat and Detering and Haie will go back to their old jobs” (pg. 60) whilst they never had one. It isn’t just their jobs however, Albert perfectly explains that, “the war has ruined [them] for everything” (pg. 61) because they are still children who “know nothing of life” (pg. 180) and are inexperienced. The war has taken away their “desire to conquer the world,” (pg. 61) their “knowledge of life is limited to death” (pg. 180) and they are “devoid of hope” (pg. 199). Paul’s lost connection with the rest of the world and the soldiers’ lives being ruined signifies that Remarque intended the novel to be interpreted as

Open Document