Paul Baumer is the narrator of
the book, All Quiet On The Western Front.
The book is narrated in 1st person and set up to be like a diary of Paul’s
experiences during war.
When we start the story, he is
a 19-year-old boy just graduated from high school with a mother, father, and
older sister. Due to intense pressure from society (namely one of his school
teachers), Paul enlists in the German army along with 27 of his other
classmates. Paul begins the story with several friends, still a little green
around the gills and optimistic about life. Most of the book is filled with
Paul’s philosophical thinking, reflecting on the war and what it has done to
him and the other men in his platoon. He talks about not only the physical
limits he is pushed to, but also the psychological limits he experiences. Paul
struggles with trying to keep his sanity while battling in a war he is losing,
as well as dealing with the brutal situations which come with trench warfare.
"Just as we turn into animals when we go up to the line . . . so we turn into wags and loafers
when we are resting. . . . We want to live at any price; so we cannot burden ourselves with
feelings which, though they may be ornamental enough in peacetime, would be out of place
here.” (Chapter 7, All Quiet on the Western Front)
Paul speaks of how the war turned him into an animal during battle, because he could only rely
on his most basic instincts, or else he would surely die.
Paul Baumer is a kind and gentle young man, but
because of the war and the pain it"Just as we turn into animals when we go up to the line . . . so we turn into wags and loafers
when we are resting. . . . We want to live at any price; so we cannot burden ourselves with
feelings which, though they may be ornamental enough in peacetime, would be out of place
here.” (Chapter 7, All Quiet on the Western Front)
Paul speaks of how the war turned him into an animal during battle, because he could only rely
on his most basic instincts, or else he would surely die.
induces, Paul learns how to disconnect his mind from his heart. By doing this, Paul becomes
unable to feel the heartache of his comrades’ deaths, as well as the ability to conjure the idea of
a future without war. The most disheartening thing that Paul loses because of the war was his
capacity to feel at home among his family and town that he once loved so much.
Mackenzie Branch
James Kreiman
Amanda Goedeke
Jake Mueller
No comments:
Post a Comment