Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

The comparison between "All quiet on the Western front" by Erich Maria Remarque and "Slaughterhouse 5" by Kurt Vonnegut

Powerful Essays
2343 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The comparison between "All quiet on the Western front" by Erich Maria Remarque and "Slaughterhouse 5" by Kurt Vonnegut
When writing literary works most, authors will agree that it is difficult to write a story without any inspiration. The writers will often have some motive, either from past experiences or something that can inspire an idea for a novel. Although the novel can be fictitious it can still change how society feels about a certain issue. The two novels All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque and Slaughterhouse 5 by Kurt Vonnegut romanticizes what war is like, emphasizing ideas such as glory, horror, honor, patriotic duty, and adventure. The similarities include both authors have their impression that the absurdity of war is morally wrong, how soldiers act as toys in the sandbox being played with higher authorities. Both novels feature the society of young men to be controlled and sent to their demise with little hope. The differences between the two novels is that both novels feature a different approach on how the novel flows. Vonnegut moves the story in humorous manner whereas Remarque tells it in a serious manner.

The obvious comparison when exploring the two novels is the aspect that they are antiwar novels. In Slaughterhouse 5, Vonnegut is trying to express his point of view, or sway the readers to understand the negative properties of war since the firebombing of the German town Dresden during World War II. The protagonist Billy Pilgrim is the antiwar hero because he does not fit the description of the usual war hero. "He didn 't look like a soldier at all. He looked like a filthy flamingo" (Vonnegut, 33) Billy 's character is a customary figure of fun in the American Army. Billy is no exception. He is powerless to harm the enemy or to help his friends. He wears no medals, his physical appearance and build is a mockery and his faith in loving Jesus troubles most soldiers. (Lichtenstein) Vonnegut realizes that war is inevitable, it 's like death. Even if Billy were to train hard, wear the proper uniform, and be a good soldier he might still die like the rest of the others in Dresden. Billy lives in a life with indignity and is not afraid of death, and in accordance to the Traflamadorian philosophy of accepting death. By uttering the phrase "so it goes" the narrator points out the meaningless slaughter after every death, no matter how ironic, sarcastic or random. "On the eighth day, the hobo died. So it goes. His last words were, "You think this is bad? This ain 't bad."" (Vonnegut 79) "But the candles and soap were made from the fat of rendered Jews and Gypsies and fairies and communist and other enemies of the state. So it goes" (Vonnegut, 96) Billy always sees death coming, but nothing he can do about it. In chapter 10, at the end of novel Vonnegut shows the reader how there is nothing intelligent to say after the massacre of Dresden,

"Billy and the rest wandered out onto the shady street. The trees were leafing out. There was nothing going on out there, no traffic of any kind. There was only one vehicle, an abandoned wagon drawn by two horses. The wagon was green and coffin-shaped.

Birds were talking.

One bird said to Billy Pilgrim, "Poo-tee-weet?"

(Vonnegut, 215)

It is obvious when everyone is dead it is suppose to be quiet, but the bird who says "Poot-tee-weet?" symbolizes the lack of anything intelligent to say about war. It is the only appropriate thing to say, since no words can describe the horror on the firebombing of Dresden.

Erich Maria Remarque 's All Quiet on the Western Front presents its reader with the harsh reality of war. The novel sets out to portray war and the actual experiences, replacing the romantic picture of glory and heroism with a decidedly unromantic vision of terror, vanity, and slaughter. The novel takes place during World War I and in the perspective of a German soldier, Paul Baumer the protagonist. Stylistically the novel consists of short chapters that symbolize the quick pace of death in the novel. For example in chapter one Remarque already introduces the pain and agony of loss in friendship. (Ward) For example in chapter one, Kimmerich being one of the four friends of Paul dies while being brought back from the trenches. (Remarque) Remarque smashes any positive thoughts the reader may have about warfare in his descriptions,

"It is impossible to grasp the fact that there are human faces above these torn bodies, faces in which life goes on from day to day and on top of it all, this is just one single military hospital, just one - there are hundreds of thousands of them in Germany, France, and Russia. How pointless all human thoughts, words and deeds must be, if things like this are possible! Everything must have been fraudulent and pointless if thousands of years of civilization weren 't even able to prevent the river of blood. Only a military hospital can show you what war really is"

(Remarque, 186)

It seems that the impression of war is not honor or glory yet it is suffering of those who are participating. Because All Quiet on the Western Front is set among soldiers fighting on the front, one of its main focuses is the damaging effect that war has on the soldiers who fight it. How one 's thoughts on the war can ruin the past experiences with a harsh focus on the physical and mental damage done. The men in the novel are constantly subjective to physical danger. Literally the soldiers can be blown to pieces at any time. This threat causes damage done to the brain and triggering a mental picture, forcing soldiers to experience fear during every moment of their time on the front. "We became tough, suspicious, hard-hearted, vengeful and rough, if they had sent us out into the trenches without this kind of training he probably most of us would have gone mad"

(Remarque, 19) Likewise in Slaughterhouse 5 Billy Pilgrim didn 't receive the proper training that driven him into the peak of insanity. And the only way to survive for both Billy and Paul is to disconnect themselves from their feelings, and accept the conditions of their life. "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." (Remarque, 123) In Billy 's case he uses the illusion of time travel to escape his thoughts in the Slaughterhouse 5.

Additionally to the similarities of both novels being antiwar novels, there is an idea that the authors highlight the generation of young men being drafted to the war.

Remarque 's All Quiet on the Western Front gives emphasis on the particular affect war has on the young men who have not been given the chance to experience life. Paul 's character represents the young generation of men who went straight from childhood into World War I. Paul describes his fellow soldiers: he, Leer, Muller, and Kropp are all 19 years old. They are from the same school, same classes, and each enlisted into the army voluntary. (Remarque) "They are from one of the newly raise regiments, almost exclusively young men from the latest age group to be drafted. They 've had hardly any training, nothing more than a bit of theory." (Remarque, 93) The war changes Paul 's attitude about the world and about humanity. He believes the war becomes not merely a traumatic experience or a hardship to be endured but something that actually transforms the essence of human existence into endless suffering. (Ward) The longer that Paul survives the war, the more that he hates it, the less certain that life will be better for him after it ends. (Ward) The war teaches the generation of young men the effects of nationalism and political power. Tools used to control the nations population. Forcing them to believe in what is "right". Throughout Paul 's experience he realizes that the soldiers that fight on the front are not fighting for the nation but fighting for their own survival, to kill or be killed. Additionally, Paul and his friends do not consider the opposing fraction to be their real enemies,

"I didn 't want to kill you, mate. If you were to jump in here again, I wouldn 't do it... But earlier on you were just an idea to me, a concept in my mind that called up an automatic response - it was that concept that I stabbed. It is only now that I can see that you are a human being like me. I just thought about your hand-grenades, your bayonet and your weapons - now I can see you wife, and your face, and what we have in common. Forgive me comrade, how can you be my enemy? If we threw these uniforms and weapons away you could be just as much my brother as Kat and Albert."

(Remarque, 158)

In his view, the real enemies are the men in power in their own nation, who they believe have sacrifice them to the war simply to increase their own power and glory. At the end of the novel, almost every major character is dead, epitomizing the war 's devastating effect on the generation of young men who is force to fight in it.

Slaughterhouse 5 also portrays an excellent example of young men going to war leaving back a life behind to glorify the nation 's well being. Billy Pilgrim is only 20 years old when he enters the war. During his post war life he attended night sessions at the Ilium School of Optometry. (Vonnegut) As he progresses throughout the events he encounters other soldiers who are similar in age. "Roland Weary was only eighteen, was at the end of an unhappy childhood" (Vonnegut, 35) "Two of the Germans were boys in their early teens" (Vonnegut, 52)

The differences seen in the two novels is that Remarque 's All Quiet on the Western Front moves in a very serious and descriptive way. Unlike Vonneguts Slaughterhouse 5 Remarque illustrates every death with use of carnage and gore. Every battle scene features brutal violence and bloody descriptions of death,

"We see men go on living with the top of their skulls missing; we see soldiers go on running when both their feet have been shot away--they stumble on their splintering a full half-mile on his hands, dragging his legs behind him, with both knees shattered. We see soldiers with their mouths missing, their lower jaws missing, with their faces missing; we find someone who has gripped the main artery in his arm between his teeth for two hours so that he doesn 't bleed to death. The sun goes down, night falls, the shells whistle, life comes to an end" (Remarque, 97)

Hospital scenes portray men with serious wounds that go untreated because of insufficient medical supplies. Paul carries the wounded Kat on his back to safety, only to discover that Kat 's head was hit by a piece of shrapnel while Paul was carrying him. The descriptions of rat-infestation, starvation, weather conditions, and trench warfare, and how it forces the soldiers to live in these upset conditions. (Remarque) Remarque 's novel dramatizes aspects of World War I and how the evolution of technology (trenches, artillery, chlorine gas) was a major influence that made killing easier. "Continuous fire, defensive fire, curtain fire, trench mortars, gas, tanks, machine guns, hand-grenades - words, words, but they embrace all the horrors of the world." (Remarque, 68)

Vonnegut 's Slaughterhouse 5 moves the story in a science fiction process filled with humour and irony. First of all the idea of Billy being "unstuck in time", Billy travels randomly through the moments of his life without control over his chronological destination. (Lichtenstein) Time travel leads to instability in the novel, as Billy is trying to make sense in his life giving an experience that no one can understand how Billy really feels. He time travels in order to cope with his life and all he has been through. In chapter two, Vonnegut immediately tells the beginning, middle, and ending of the story right away. Vonnegut enchants the theme of novel by adding Tralfamadorians (Vonnegut 's humor of toilet-plunger shaped Aliens) and how they abducted Billy into their spaceship and teaching Billy the philosophy of time and death and discussing whether free will exist. (Vonnegut) Witty humour and irony is a factor in the course of the novel, for instance,

"Weary socked Billy a good one on the side of his jaw, knocked Billy away from the bank and onto the snow covered ice of the creek.

"You shouldn 't even be in the Army," said Weary.

Billy was making involuntarily making convulsive sounds that were a lot like laughter. "You think it 's funny, huh?"

But then Weary saw that he had an audience. Five German soldiers and a police dog on a lash were looking down into the bed of the creek. The soldiers ' blue eyes filled with a bleary civilian curiosity as to why one American would try to murder another American, and why the victim should laugh" (Vonnegut, 51)

Ironically, of the four original soldiers, Billy is the only one who remains alive, yet he is the most unlikely one to do so.

In conclusion, in spite of the differences between Remarque 's All Quiet on the Western Front and Vonnegut 's Slaughterhouse 5 both novels convey the same message Whether the readers view Slaughterhouse-Five as a science-fiction novel or a autobiographical statement, and All Quiet on the Western Front the reader cannot ignore the destructive properties of war, since the catastrophic firebombing of the German town of Dresden during World War II or the horrendous acts of World War I including trench warfare. Both novels suggest the same conclusion about war and how it ends "quiet". By emphasizing the bird that whispered "Poot-tee-weet" towards Billy. Or the death of Paul Baumer 's "Nothing new to report on the western front" (Remarque, 207)

Bibliography

Lichtenstein, Jesse and Douthat, Ross. SparkNote on Slaughterhouse-Five. 1 May. 2005 <<Tab/>.

Remarque, Erich Maria. All Quiet on the Western Front

London: Vintage, 1996.

Vonnegute, Kurt. Slaughterhouse-five

New York: Dell Publishing, 1986.

Ward, Selena and Hopson, David. SparkNote on All Quiet on the Western Front. 1 May. 2005 .

Bibliography: Lichtenstein, Jesse and Douthat, Ross. SparkNote on Slaughterhouse-Five. 1 May. 2005 <<Tab/>. Remarque, Erich Maria. All Quiet on the Western Front London: Vintage, 1996. Vonnegute, Kurt. Slaughterhouse-five New York: Dell Publishing, 1986. Ward, Selena and Hopson, David. SparkNote on All Quiet on the Western Front. 1 May. 2005 .

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the 1969 novel, ‘Slaughterhouse Five’, Kurt Vonnegut successfully manipulates traditional narrative devices and literary techniques to position his audience to align with his ideologies of the catastrophic effects of war and the misconception of freewill. Vonnegut establishes his novel to reflect his beliefs and values, and does so through the narrative structure, symbols and motifs, and point of…

    • 60 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Erich Maria Remarque’s book All Quiet on the Western Front explains the brutal and filthy life inside the trenches during the first world war. The story revolves around high school friends who through nationalism and propaganda are convinced to join the war effort. However they did not get the heroic lifestyle they were expecting. Instead they got years filled with death, despair, and fear as they continued to fight and attempt to stay alive. Readers will follow the story and learn the true horrors on the battlefield and how even in a state of hopelessness people will still be human.…

    • 100 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Cited: Remarque, Erich Maria. All Quiet on the Western Front: The Illustrated Edition. Trans. A. W. Wheen. Boston: Little, Brown, 1996. Print.…

    • 765 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the middle of the Vietnam War, Kurt Vonnegut published Slaughterhouse-Five. The book is considered a piece of fiction by many, yet there are several parallels between the main character, Billy Pilgrim, and the author himself. Vonnegut enlisted in the United States Army in 1942 and later fought in the Battle of the Bulge (Biography). Vonnegut’s personally experienced the horrors of war leading to him having an anti-war view which brought meaning to his novel.…

    • 598 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This independent reading assignment is dedicated to Slaughterhouse-Five, written by Kurt Vonnegut. Vonnegut experienced many hardships during and as a result of his time in the military, including World War II, which he portrays through the protagonist of Slaughterhouse-Five, Billy Pilgrim. Slaughterhouse-Five, however, not only introduces these military experiences and the internal conflicts that follow, but also alters the chronological sequence in which they occur. Billy is an optometry student that gets drafted into the military and sent to Luxembourg to fight in the Battle of Bulge against Germany. Though he remains unscathed, he is now mentally unstable and becomes “unstuck in time” (Vonnegut 30). This means that he is able to perceive…

    • 428 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Erich Maria Remarque’s original 1928 novel, turned movie, All Quiet on The Western Front, is very useful in helping to understand the many social and cultural difficulties soldiers faced in WW1 during the period of 1914-1918. One could argue that the given film is reliable, but being a secondary source this is arguable. AQOTWF exhibits the saviour physical, and mental stress German soldiers of World War 1 encountered, and the raw emotional detachment from civilian life displayed by many on returning home from the front. The film has a strong connection and relation to many poems, letters and images received and taken right from the Western Front itself and is very useful in helping viewers to grasp unique insight of physically commencing in battle, living conditions, and rare friendships formed in such harsh, dreadful conditions.…

    • 1089 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Kurt Vonnegut 's Slaughterhouse-Five and Joseph Heller 's Catch-22 use similar motifs to convey their common anti-war message. Although it is truly difficult for any author to communicate the true nature of war in a work of literature, both novels are triumphant in their attempts to convey the devastating experience. The authors ' analogous writing styles, themes, and motifs run parallel to one another. Both Slaughterhouse-Five and Catch-22 incorporate irony, exemplify the idiocy and folly of military institutions, and convey a similar theme throughout their story lines.…

    • 1206 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the novel All Quiet on the Western Front, the author Erich Maria Remarque, explores the effects of war through both literary and structural techniques. Remarque himself being involved in the war, writes from the perspective of young German soldiers who were on duty during the World War One campaign. Using various literary techniques, Remarque is able to convey the effects of war through the destruction of natural imagery, the displacement experienced by the soldiers as well as the loss of identity which eventually affects the soldiers the soldiers.…

    • 908 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    We all know that, world war II, was a hard disastrous time in history,but in the story slaughterhouse-five we learn from another perspective of the author who was sent in for the battle of the bulge and witnessed the bombing of Dresden. The author had many experiences from which he had with world war II, he shows what happened and could have been his thoughts throughout the narrator Billy Pilgrim. First, Slaughterhouse five says different themes and how they relate to war. Secondly, there's many events from when the author Kurt Vonnegut’s life that made him feel this way about the war. Lastly, and the attitude of Vonnegut towards war and how it affected the narrator. This novel of Vonnegut’s seemed to help him with his experiences through…

    • 1060 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A lost generation, emotional destruction, the reality of war, these are all ideas displayed in the novel All Quiet on the Western Front that prove the validity of the statement in the preface. These ideas and more expressed by the author, Erich Maria Remarque, present the reader with the war novel of a lifetime. A war novel that is different from any other because of these ideas and the way Remarque presents them.…

    • 802 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the novel Slaughterhouse-Five, Kurt Vonnegut writes about World War ||. While writing about the reality of war, Vonnegut also writes about Billy Pilgrim's life both before and after the war, and from his travels to the planet Tralfamadore. Billy is able to move both forwards and backwards through his lifetime in an unpredictable cycle of events. Since Slaughterhouse-Five's central topic is the horror of the Dresden bombing, Billy comes across many questions about the meanings of life and death. Throughout the novel, Vonnegut uses irony and understatement to transfer the message that events in life are inevitable. These events may be negative, but it is important to focus on the positive memories instead.…

    • 431 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Slaughterhouse-Five is fictional and not written with many shocking, colorful descriptions of atrocities, which occurred during WWII as Elie Wiesel 's Night. The science fiction parts of the book are over emphasized. One does not get a truthful account of the happenings of WWII from Slaughterhouse-Five. The Tralfamadorian 's science fiction aspects of the novel dull the anti-war theme. Their beliefs coerce Billy to forget about the war; the Tralfamadorians tell Billy, "one thing Earthlings might learn to do, if they tried hard enough: Ignore the awful times, and concentrate on the good ones" (Vonnegut 117). They also tell Billy, "we spend eternity looking at pleasant moments;" they cannot do anything about the awful times, so they ignore them (Vonnegut 117). The climax of the novel is the fire bombing of Dresden; the reader is aware of this from the start, it is stated in the first chapter. The description of the bombing it is short; one could almost miss it. Billy does not travel back to the event nor does he re-live it, like he does many other less important events. The book 's climax is supposed to be the fire bombing of Dresden;…

    • 2683 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout All Quiet on the Western Front Remarque displays many things for example, how World War I affected the Lost Generation, Paul Bäumer and his friends suffered greatly in a senseless war, and that they cannot live a normal life when their first calling was…

    • 521 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    War is often viewed as one of the most dangerous and brutal events ever created. It utterly destroys the humanity and mental state of soldiers fighting in the war. In All Quiet on the Western Front, a world renowned war novel by Erich Maria Remarque, the epigraph states that this novel “will try simply to tell of a generation of men who, even though they may have escaped shells, were destroyed by the war.” Staying true to this quote, Remarque tells of the horrors of World War I and fittingly describes the effects that war has on humans through the eyes of the protagonist, Paul Bäumer. In his epigraph Remarque says, “this book is to be neither an accusation, nor a confession, and least of all an adventure.” Except for a few notable exceptions,…

    • 1401 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    All Quiet On the Western Front, written by Erich Maria Remarque, is a war novel based on World War 1 with the German/French front. In this novel, Remarque applies the changes the war makes on the soldiers a probable and dependable theme throughout the novel that plays a climactic role in the growth of the characters. A soldier must fight against the physical and mental threats every second on the battlefield. Throughout the novel a young man named Paul Baumer, a 19 year old german soldier, narrates his story but is likely the explanation for all of the soldiers in the war at this time. Over the course of the story, one can see how his expeditions in the war changed him and his view on life and how the theme of the war affecting him begins.…

    • 1021 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays