Soldiers In The War essay topics

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  • Disaster As A Soldier In War
    1,271 words
    When many think of wars, the first thought that comes to mind is the land which was fought over and which side won. They never consider the psychological side effect soldiers endure during war. For many, this is the only side they see so there is no exposure except through writers such as Ernest Hemingway. In For Whom the Bell Tolls, Hemingway captivates the realism of war through his own eyes. Drawing from his own observation and experiences as an ambulance driver, Hemingway shows the psycholog...
  • Battle For Three Years
    448 words
    Question #3 - Discuss the roles of men, women and children during the Revolutionary War. Women were often referred to as "camp followers" and provided much of the nursing care, cooking help, the soldiers washing and some helped load artillery. Women looked after their loved ones, and kept family matters systematic, as well. A few were prostitutes, some officers' wives or mistresses, however the majority were married to ordinary soldiers. Deborah Champion was a beautiful spy who took information ...
  • Thin Red Line
    662 words
    War In both Saving Private Ryan and The Thin Red Line, a recurring theme appeared to be the impact of war on the common soldier. Through a variety of different scenarios, the viewer is exposed to the daily hardships that one must endure while in battle. The soldiers are continuously walking a fine line between life and death, and their morale and tenacity does not escape unscathed. The opening scene in Saving Private Ryan was very instrumental in illustrating the horror that is war. The only thi...
  • World War II
    2,134 words
    " [B] oh sides had seen, in a sad scrawl of broken earth and murdered men, the answer to the question... Neither race had won, nor could win, the War. The War had won, and would go on winning". 1 These are the words of Edmund Blunder, a British soldier who survived the Battle of the Somme, who came to the realization that nobody could claim victory in the twentieth-century mass warfare, because both winners and losers paid a high price. The new type of warfare launched in the twentieth-century h...
  • Soldiers With Serious Wounds To Hospitals
    888 words
    Medicine and Hospitals in the Civil WarT he Civil War had more deaths than all previous wars combined. Most people think those soldiers in the Civil War died of wounds or amputations, but the truth is that most died from common diseases that they never had been exposed to. Twice as many soldiers died from diseases than those soldiers who died in battle. Most people in the beginning of the war; thought it was only going to last a few weeks or months, so not much effort was put into recruiting doc...
  • Vietnam War
    606 words
    The years 1961 to 1972 saw the American involvement in Vietnam. For a little over ten years, America sent its sons off to fight for an unknown cause in a country they knew little about. When the United States finally pulled out of Southeast Asia, many were left scratching their heads. Over 58,000 young men died without really knowing why. Although it is a work of fiction, Tim O'Brien's Going After Cacciato expresses the views of those who spent their lives in the jungles of Vietnam. The Vietnam ...
  • Life Of A Soldier In World War
    1,167 words
    All Quiet On The Western Front, written by Erich Maria Remarque, takes place in France during World War I. Paul Baume r, the narrator, was a young man who was fighting for his country, Germany. Paul was only 18 years old when the book first begins. Remarque starts the story with Paul and all of the soldiers in his company just finished with heavy front line fighting against the English and the French. He goes on in the story to explain the life of a soldier in World War. Sometimes it was scary, ...
  • Harold Krebs Return Home From World War
    1,278 words
    In Soldier's Home, Ernest Hemingway depicts Harold Krebs return home from World War I and the problems he faces when dealing with his homecoming and transition back towards a normal life. After the fighting overseas commenced, it took Krebs a year to finally leave Europe and return to his family in Oklahoma. Once home, he found it hard to talk about all he had seen in his tour of duty overseas, which should be attributed to the fact that he saw action in some of the bloodiest, most crucial battl...
  • Poem To The Reality Of War
    1,487 words
    INTRODUCTION In the poem, 'Dulce Et Decorum Est' by Wilfred Owen, the social climate of the World War I era is reflected through the poet's use of vivid imagery and poetic techniques. The poem itself presents an a blunt impression of the world through its linking of ideas and language in its text. The poem addresses the falsehood, that war is glorious, that it is noble, it describes the true horror and waste that is war, with the aim of changing the way in which society thinks about conflict. TH...
  • Point The British Soldiers
    797 words
    The American Revolution was a tough time for America and the people who fought it. Many wars were fought and many people died, but throughout the whole events moments of inspiration were evident. One such time was in the Battle of Lexington which took place on April 19th, 1775 and one such poem the truly reflects it is called The Battle of Lexington which was written by Sidney Lanier. The poem reflects the thoughts of this man and Paul Revere during this time. In the first stanza Mr. Lanier tell...
  • Conclusion Erich Maria Remarque's Antiwar Novels
    970 words
    Enrich Maria Remarque: A Militant Pacifist The First World War was a horrible experience for all sides involved, no one was immune to the effects of this global conflict, and each country was changed in many ways. Erich Maria Remarque was drafted into World War I at age 18. In 1929 Remarque's first book All Quiet on the Western Front was published. Throughout the book, the death and destruction caused by battle is clearly shown. Remarque's novel is a statement against war, focusing dramatically ...
  • Film Saving Private Ryan
    775 words
    To further my understanding of global war, peace and justice I viewed the film Saving Private Ryan. This film perfectly ties in with our current war theme in Excel, for it shows the injustices of war, the brutality of war and also the good that may come of war. Furthermore, watching Saving Private Ryan was a great way to get a real sense of war. Saving Private Ryan certainly had a nicely followed story line while giving the realistic and brutal views of war. The story takes place in 1944 around ...
  • Fellow Soldiers In The North And South
    2,312 words
    It was a war to surpass all wars. It began as a disagreement; who had the right to succeed, and whose power was more effective. The Civil War began as a test of states rights versus federal rights, and augmented into the bloodiest battle to ever be fought on American soil. When it began, both sides were certain that the war would be quick, ninety days at most, and God would see to it that the one in the right was victorious. As the days progressed, and the ninety days passed, the fate of the war...
  • Real Horror Of War And The Army
    781 words
    War is, at the same time, the most terrible and the greatest of human experiences. Is this the view conveyed in All quiet on the western front In the novel 'All quiet on the western front' by Erich Maria Remarque we see clearly that war is a most terrible experience, with its great horror and ability to destroy a human, not only physically but also mentally. However accompanying this horror is an extraordinary comradeship and friendship that is seen in both the sad and happy times bringing the s...
  • De Pizan And Brecht
    1,460 words
    Bert olt Brecht's Mother Courage and Her Children and Christine de Pizan's Deeds of Arms and of Chivalry are associated in relation to European war history. Both authors' writings reflect similar ideas that war is righteous and honorable. They also recognize its financial importance in their societies, and don't see reason for the war to cease. However Brecht touched on the more negative aspects such as famine through concentrating on civilian life, while de Pizan focuses on more optimistic view...
  • Dulce Et Decorum Est By Wilfred Owen
    1,090 words
    A poem which affected me deeply was 'Dulce et Decorum Est' by Wilfred Owen. In this poem Owen conveys a potent message of war that was largely unheard of before. He depicts the realities of war with men tortured by gas, and even facing death, a war which brings about no heroism. To convey his message he uses a number of techniques including; simile, metaphor and alliteration. Young soldiers often join the army for the respect and patriotic feeling that is associated with fighting and dying for y...
  • Are Soldiers The Only People
    1,035 words
    Chloe Smith Eng. Per 4 Essay Are Soldiers only Suffering? An examination of "All is Quiet on the Western front" Are soldiers the only people who suffer during war? During the terrifying and tragic time of war, not only are soldiers affected, but the people left behind at home suffer as well. In Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front, terrifying situations become reality to the many men, women, and children who are affected by war. One example of this is when Paul, the main charact...
  • Collin Es Motivation Of Pride
    395 words
    The theme of "A Mystery of Heroism" " is the foolishness and pointlessness of war. Through his use of symbolism, Crane shows how war costs a very high price to accomplish its trivial goal. The story follows the soldier Collins on his impulsive journey to get water from a well across a dangerous field. Although Collins could easily be killed in doing this, he takes the joking suggestions of his comrades as a dare and goes anyway. After leaving, he realizes that he has been partly motivated by pri...
  • Maturity With The War Their Only Home
    2,297 words
    Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front, a novel set in World War I, centers around the changes brought by the war onto one young German soldier. During his time in the war, Remarque's protagonist, Paul Baumer, changes from a rather innocent romantic young man to a hardened and somewhat caustic veteran. The story also focuses on the lives of Baumer's comrades. They all begin by patriotically marching off to join the army. However, their visions of the glories of war are soon swept away with ho...
  • Ba Mer
    1,114 words
    Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front is one of the greatest war novels of all time. It is a story, not of Germans, but of men, who even though they may have escaped shells, were destroyed by the war. The entire purpose of this novel is to illustrate the vivid horror and raw nature of war and to change the popular belief that war is an idealistic and romantic character. The story centers on Paul Ba? mer, who enlists in the German army with glowing enthusiasm. But in the course of...

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