Remarque's All Quiet On The Western Front

Words: 567
Pages: 3

Actually Remarque did not start the novel with Paul as a fresh, eager and idealistic new recruit. This is based on the fact that Paul acted as the protagonist to the entire novel. As the novel's storyteller and hero, Paul is the focal figure in All Quiet on the Western Front and serves as the mouthpiece for Remarque's reflections about war (Remarque & Kiesel, 2004). All through the novel, Paul's inward identity is appeared differently in relation to the way the war constrains him to act and feel. His recollections of the time before the war demonstrate that he was at one time an altogether different man from the hopeless officer who now portrays the novel. Paul is a humane and delicate young fellow; before the war, he cherished his family and composed verse. In view of the awfulness of the war and the nervousness it instigates, Paul, as different officers, …show more content…
Paul often considers the past and the future from the point of view of his whole era, taking note of that, when the war closures, he and his companions won't comprehend what to do, as they have figured out how to be grown-ups just while battling the war. The more extended that Paul survives the war and the more that he loathes it, the less sure he is that life will be better for him after it closes (Remarque & Kiesel, 2004). This tension emerges from his conviction that the war will have demolished his era, will have so killed his and his companions' psyches that they will dependably be "confused." Against such discouraging desires, Paul is assuaged by his demise: "his face had a look of quiet; just as practically happy the end had come." The war gets to be not simply a traumatic ordeal or a hardship to be continued yet something that really changes the substance of human presence into unalterable, interminable