Erich Maria Remarque Erich Maria Remarque's novel "The quiet place of the Western Front" shows the idea of long-lasting destructive "great war". Soon the romantic illusions about battle will collapse. Enthusiastic teen boys believe that their patriotic teachers fight for their country, and they feel they are part of a lost generation. This novel tells us how bad the pain hurts for the people who fought at the forefront of the First World War.
Title: Erich Maria Lemarck Published: 1929 Course: Anecdote of Fiction about Information War: -Erich Maria · Lemarque All on the Western Front Creators in the German city of Osnabruck on 22nd June 1898 The family of quiet working people was conceived by Peter Franz Remark (Jiserswerth, 14 June 1867) and Anna Maria (born in Katernberg, 21 November 1871). - During the First World War, Remarque was adopted by the army at the age of 18. On June 12, 1917, he smelled cigars full of air, gunpowder and dirt. There is no nationalism, and what Paul wants is survival. The First World War must be about nationalism and publicity that makes soldiers feel better than other countries, but how difficult it is to become a soldier with his story at the forefront As Paul talks about, Paul proved it. "Silence of the Western Front" represents the actual experience of war, replacing the romantic picture of glory and romance.
Paul's quiet façade at the forefront of the West In Elmar Maria's remark novel "The Tranquility of the West Front Line", Paul Bowmar draws a brilliant picture of the fear of war. Many of these fears are purely critical things like constant fire and gunfire overhead. But with these physical fear comes from the spirit and emotion. The most important of these is the "war spirit" that soldiers must learn in order to survive in war. The essence of this idea is to completely ignore the battlefield as a hero and I am pleased to die for the honor of his county. Erich Maria Remarque's "all the tranquility of the Western Front" is not a patriotic soldier who is willing to join the war, but draws a vivid picture. Remarque's work is delicately shown, but the soldiers' expectation for war can no longer be far removed from the concept of war in society. "Everything quiet on the western front" is a poor life of the lifetime of a young innocent soldier, Paul Bowmer, throughout the First World War.