Soldiers In The War essay topics

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  • U.S. Soldiers In Iraq
    948 words
    Friday-January 16, 2004- 4: 00 p. m: I was watching 'Oprah' and a particular story struck me. It was about these young brides in India who were being burned alive by their husbands because they have become a burden. Before these women are married off, their husbands receive dowries from the bride's family, when the family can no longer meet up with his demands-he sets his wife on fire, in hopes of her dying, and he will eventually marry another bride and obtain more dowry. These women are shun f...
  • Lone Soldier
    601 words
    The irony in the poem Dulce it Decorum Est is that it is not sweet and fitting to die for one's country when you have actually experienced war. Owen is describing how psychologically and physically exhausting W.W. I was for the soldiers that had to endure such a cruel ordeal and not how patriotic and honorable it was. In the first stanza Owen describes how the soldiers are trudging back to camp from battle. We see the soldiers, fatigued and wounded, returning to base camp: Bent double, like old ...
  • Soldiers Of The Vietnam War
    1,921 words
    Vietnam Soldiers - "They Carried Ghosts" Essay submitted by T avia The relationship between the soldiers of the Vietnam War was different from the relationships with people from home. The soldiers felt as if they could not tell the whole truth about the war through their eyes to their loved ones at home. The soldiers that they were with all the time understood the pain and confusion each other felt, yet no one talked about it. War changed how people had relationships with others. War could bring...
  • Thousands Of Other Soldiers
    587 words
    As I sat and thought about what would catch and hold a reader by the nose, an old picture on the wall distracted me. It's not much of a picture, just a group of guys at work in a rather desolate place. This picture has rather special meaning to me, and carries with it a whole assortment of memories. The unknown is always worse then the known. Don't listen to rumors or try to imagine what it's like here. This is a modern sophisticated, highly technical, well-planned war. One I am sure I will retu...
  • Apparent Change In Views On The War
    905 words
    Erich Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front is not about men, but of German soldiers and their hardships during World War I and how their attitudes changed throughout the war. We believe in such things no longer, we believe in the war (p. 88). This novel portrays the overwhelming effects and power war has to deteriorate the human spirit, scar physically, and scar mentally. You start out leaving you re home and family proud and ready to fight for you country, to toward the end of the war, you...
  • Poems The Man He Killed
    571 words
    In Poems 'The Man He Killed', 'Reconciliation', and 'Dreamers', the Authors Show That Man Kills Because He Must In the chosen poems, Thomas Hardy, Walt Whitman, and Siegfried Sassoon each have a common viewpoint: war brings out the worst in man, a feeling buried deep inside the heart. Even with this clotting of the mind due to the twisting ways of war, a flicker of remorse, a dream of someplace, something else still exists within the rational thought. These poems express hope, the hope that war ...
  • American Soldiers Return Home
    586 words
    Freedom Rides, Vietnam, and Social activism among the youths of America have left the 60's with a very profound effect on our society. Without question, the decade of the 1960's was one of the most controversial in American History. Throughout this period of social unrest, anti-war attitudes were gaining prevalence in a peace-loving subculture, and individuals began to question certain aspects of governmental policy and authority. This was the decade of peace and war, optimism and despair, cultu...
  • Young Vietnamese Love War
    1,056 words
    A New View of the War When we think of the Vietnam War, we think of all the hell and torture that American soldiers went through with little regard to the Vietnamese and the hardships they endured. Reading the Sorrow of War gave me a clear understanding of the Vietnamese people and the suffering that the war caused them. The Sorrow of War is unique and powerful in the sense that it is written by a Vietnam army veteran and gives the perspective of the war from a Vietnamese soldier. It is one of t...
  • Universal Soldier's Personal Experience
    1,339 words
    In the early 20th century, many poets began to undertake a broad literary movement which was a reaction against the Romanticism of the 19th century, the purpose of which was to depict more realistic situations, rather than the more sentimental aspects of the poems that preceded them. The effects of World War I, which lasted from 1914 to 1918, had a great effect on this "modernist" movement. In Siegfried Sassoon's "A Working Party", we can begin to see this modern realism through the use of hard,...
  • How To Die And The Conscientious Objector
    425 words
    World War One Analy zation As World World One began, many men were drafted to join the war. People around the neighborhood would even encourage you to go and fight for your country. Well, there were many diss allusions of World War One as defined in "All Quiet", and various other poems such as MCMXIV, How To Die, and The Conscientious Objector. People who entered the war had absolutely no idea of what war was like, many wrote poems, and stories to tell of the horrors and sadness of the war. For ...
  • Soldier's Greatest Fear
    993 words
    Through The Things They Carried, Tim O'Brien moves beyond the horror of fighting in the Vietnam War to examine with sensitivity and insight the nature of courage and fear. Included, is a collection of interrelated stories. A few of the stories are brutal, while others are flawed, blurring the distinction between fact and fiction. All the stories, however, deal with one platoon. Some are about the wartime experiences of soldiers, and others are about a 43-year-old writer reminiscing about his pla...
  • Conditions The Soldiers
    1,235 words
    Explain The Changing Attitudes Of British Soldiers And Civilians Towards The War When war broke out in 1914 soldiers were ready and eager to fight a war they believed would be over by Christmas. They volunteered to beat the Germans, to fight for King and country, to protect their land and families and they believed it was their duty. There was also huge public pressure to join up and objectors were given white feathers and publicly ridiculed. Friends egged each other on and rushed to join up tog...
  • Example Of Sex In Catch 22
    920 words
    The Surprising Aspect of Sex in Heller's Catch-22 Joseph Heller's humorist-war novel, Catch-22, has many surprising passages and themes. The part that is most surprising to me in Catch-22 is the amount of sexual connotation in a novel based around World War II. The question which has to be raised is, Is Catch-22 really about World War II While this book is a factious war novel, you get a different look into the lives of the soldiers. Their lives are filled with sex, whether it is a quick stop at...
  • Paul B
    1,031 words
    Remarque's World War I novel, All Quiet on the Western Front, revolves around the effects that war has on Paul B"aumer, a young German soldier, and his comrades. During his time in the war, Paul B"aumer changes from an innocent, carefree young man to a hardened and cynical veteran. Paul and his comrades begin their military experience by patriotically marching off to join the army. They carry with them naive notions of the glories of war. These visions are soon replaced with the horror of realit...
  • War Like A Hero
    975 words
    Tyler Crosby Mrs. Bel court Grade 12 University English Tuesday February 18, 2003 Is War Worth Dying For? Heroism is a title that soldiers are rewarded after a courageous war on the battlefield. The battlefield is where enormous numbers of people fight for justice, or for a cause they believe to be so. "On the Road to Berlin" by Ernie Pyle is an essay that explains the American invasion of Normandy in World War II. Pyle argues that nobody wins in war. "Story of War and Change" by Reza Kiarash is...
  • Owen Forces Readers
    1,408 words
    Life is not easy for soldiers in World War I as Wilfred Owen expresses strongly in his famous poem "Dulce et Decorum est". In the poem, he presents the frightful imagery of World War I. Wilfred Owen also conveys his strongly anti-war sentiments to readers. Through vivid imagery and figurative language, Owen forces readers to experience the war, and therefore gives readers the exact feeling he wants. Owen applies sensory imagery and metaphor to contribute to the power and anti-war sentiment of th...
  • Great War Novel
    785 words
    Anti-War on All Quiet on the Western Front All Quiet on the Western Front, written by Erich Maria Remarque, is a considered a great war novel in that it describes, in amazing detail, the experience of a German Soldier at front lines of World War I. As it describes the effects of war, we can also consider this book one of the greatest anti-war novels ever written. War puts men who are similar, all except that they wear a different uniform, against each other to fight and kill. When Paul saw the R...
  • Remarque's All Quiet On The Western Front
    836 words
    War is often perceived as glamorous and an adventure to those we are involved. However, war destroys many people in many ways. After fighting in the trenches of World War I, Erich Maria Remarque and Wilfred Owen poured their experiences into works of literature. Even though Remarque and Owen were enemies during the war, identical themes can be found in Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front and Owen's Insensibility and Asleep. A theme that runs parallel between the works of both men is that s...
  • Coldness Of War To Baumer
    898 words
    All Quiet on the Western Front Critique In All Quiet on the Western Front, Erich Maria Remarque, writes of the reality of war, and its psychological impact on the soldiers that lived through WWI. Through his character Paul Baumer, we see how the cruelty, chaos, and violence of War, can begin to degenerate his state of mind. All Quiet on the Western Front, is the story of Paul Baumer during World War I. Paul Baumer is a German student in high school when he and his friends join the War after bein...
  • Paul And His Group Of Soldier Friends
    701 words
    All's Quiet On The Western Front Essay, All's Quiet On The Western Front All Quiet on the Western Front Book Review While lying in dark, muddy, lice infested trench, bullets, grenades, bombs and shrapnel fly over your head, intended to hit you. Risking your life is a daily ritual, along with trying to kill the enemy. Your diet consists of whatever you can get your hands on, and your bed is a metal net covered in hay. Doesn't sound like the kind of life you would like to live? Well, so is the lif...

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