Ernst Jünger And Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet On The Western Front

1207 Words3 Pages

Ernst Jünger and Erich Maria Remarque offer two descriptive, but different perspectives of the life of a German soldier fighting in the trenches during the First World War. Remarque’s “All Quiet on the Western Front” tells the story of Paul Bäumer, a nineteen-year-old German who enlisted with his school friends after the outbreak of the war. While it is a work of fiction and written in the format of a novel, Remarque’s experiences and anti-war perspective are still shown through the way in which he describes the events. Jünger, on the other hand, tells his experiences of fighting in the trenches on the Western front through his memoir, “Storm of Steel”, which would become the most popular German book of its time. A true adventure-seeker, he …show more content…

Erich Remarque’s main character, Paul Bäumer, enlisted with his friends at the age of nineteen after being encouraged by his schoolteacher at the outbreak of the war. His role in the military was similar to that of Remarque’s: a standard foot soldier fighting in the trenches on the Western front. Paul’s main activities consisted of him defending and waiting in the trenches and given this situation, Remarque’s descriptions consist of the less action-filled, but equally horrifying aspects of the life of a soldier fighting in the trenches of World War One. In one case, he describes Paul’s experiences with him waiting solemnly with his comrades for long periods of time while being bombarded by artillery shells. He even details the constant threat of being buried alive under their entrenched fortifications with just one unlucky impact; shockingly, he notes that even this is something that could calm the nerves of the waiting soldiers: “A shell lands square in front of our post. At once it is dark. We are buried and must dig ourselves out. After an hour the entrance is clear again, and we are calmer because we have had something to do.” (Remarque,

Open Document