The Impact of the Western Front on the Life of British soldiers from 1914 to 1916 World War I was an uncertain war. Although the war of 1914 ends at Christmas, continuing in 1916, the attitude towards war lifestyle is different. Compare the views of soldiers and the public in the UK adopted. Initially, the soldiers gathered in the army and they had a vision of bringing them back. Because they may be with friends and families of the Western Front
By mid-1916, the Western Front British Army seemed to be a huge linear city, the second largest British city after London, so the overall "groove culture" was formed . The military used most of its existing civilian culture for the war, and the impact of other countries and cultures on most soldiers was very small. The daily experience of individual soldiers also varies greatly. Even soldiers in combat forms like infantry will participate in up to two or three major battles during the war. The forefront is the place of death and fear, British troops tried to improve the soldier's experience of these soldiers by regular rotation and departure, so most soldiers are behind the front line.
"All the silence of the Western Front" is an acclaimed novel which analyzed in detail the influence that the experience of the First World War had on the lives of millions of soldiers. The silence of the western front is a novel that deviates largely from the traditional war novel used to describe the experience of soldiers in war as one of adventure, glory and honor. Instead, the author Remarque highlighted the negative physical and psychological damage it causes to soldiers, emphasizing the fear and useless of war. According to Remark's own war experiences, the central figures of the Western Front are all 19-year-old young German soldier Paul Bowmer who fought against the German army on the French front. He represents millions of people involved in the tragedy of the First World War.
The First World War began in 1914. On the western front, British and French are fighting marching Germans. The supply of new war is carried through waterways throughout the UK. Initially, the Germans tried to control the waterway with their navy, but the Englishman managed to dominate the German Navy somehow. When the Germans began to attack the ship with a submarine, the circumstances around the British Ocean have changed. They called their submarines "Unterseeboots" or "Undersea Boat." This name is abbreviated U-boat. On February 4, 1915, the Germans declared the waters surrounding the UK as war zones and said that they would attack any Allied ships that enter that area.