All Quiet on the Western Front: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Get a Hold of Yourself, Man!]]: A newbie in the trenches is getting hysterical to the point of trying to leave the bomb shelter. Everybody else in the shelter beats him up until he doesn't try to leave any more. Paul tells us that it's not pleasant, but it's the only thing that helps.
* [[Get a Hold of Yourself, Man!]]: A newbie in the trenches is getting hysterical to the point of trying to leave the bomb shelter. Everybody else in the shelter beats him up until he doesn't try to leave any more. Paul tells us that it's not pleasant, but it's the only thing that helps.
* [[Getting Crap Past the Radar]]: Tjaden is occasionally described as "delivering the most famous quote from ''[[Götz von Berlichingen (historical figure)|Götz von Berlichingen]]''." Quoting Goethe seems harmless enough, right? Wrong, since the quote in question is: {{spoiler|"Er aber, sags ihm, er kann mich im Arsche lecken". This is German for "But he, tell him that, he can lick me inside my arse!"}}
* [[Getting Crap Past the Radar]]: Tjaden is occasionally described as "delivering the most famous quote from ''[[Götz von Berlichingen (historical figure)|Götz von Berlichingen]]''." Quoting Goethe seems harmless enough, right? Wrong, since the quote in question is: {{spoiler|"Er aber, sags ihm, er kann mich im Arsche lecken". This is German for "But he, tell him that, he can lick me inside my arse!"}}
* [[Gray and Gray Morality]] : Full stop.
* [[Gray and Gray Morality]] : Full stop.{{context}}
* [[Heroic BSOD]] : Paul has a very memorable one {{spoiler|after stabbing the French soldier trapped with him in a crater to death and then listening to him slowly die during the entire sleepless night. [[Must Make Amends|After he examines the dead soldier's personal belongings, he repentantly promises to secretly support his family once the war ends]]. [[Tear Jerker|Then he realizes he can't, because they'd eventually find out who's the mysterious donor and realize he's the one who killed their relative]].}}
* [[Heroic BSOD]] : Paul has a very memorable one {{spoiler|after stabbing the French soldier trapped with him in a crater to death and then listening to him slowly die during the entire sleepless night. [[Must Make Amends|After he examines the dead soldier's personal belongings, he repentantly promises to secretly support his family once the war ends]]. [[Tear Jerker|Then he realizes he can't, because they'd eventually find out who's the mysterious donor and realize he's the one who killed their relative]].}}
* [[Humiliation Conga]]: Himmelstoss gets this early on in the book as revenge for his harsh boot camp rituals.
* [[Humiliation Conga]]: Himmelstoss gets this early on in the book as revenge for his harsh boot camp rituals.
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* [[Soldiers at the Rear]]: Corporal Himmelstoss.
* [[Soldiers at the Rear]]: Corporal Himmelstoss.
* [[Stranger in a Familiar Land]]: Paul feels like this, when he visits home.
* [[Stranger in a Familiar Land]]: Paul feels like this, when he visits home.
* [[Title Drop]]: On the last page. A cable from the High Command stating this is sent, at the end of the war {{spoiler|the main character apparently died nearly the last day, like Real Life anti-war British poet soldier [[wikipedia:Wilfred Owen|Wilfred Owen]]}}.
* [[Title Drop]]: On the last page. A cable from the High Command stating this is sent, at the end of the war {{spoiler|the main character apparently died nearly the last day, like Real Life anti-war British poet soldier [[wikipedia:Wilfred Owen|Wilfred Owen]]}}.
* [[War Is Hell]]: The original title is literally "Nothing New in the West". Now think about what happened, the setting, and ''why'' there's nothing new.
* [[War Is Hell]]: The original title is literally "Nothing New in the West". Now think about what happened, the setting, and ''why'' there's nothing new.
* [[Wide-Eyed Idealist]]: One [[Mauve Shirt]] character.
* [[Wide-Eyed Idealist]]: One [[Mauve Shirt]] character.

Revision as of 16:40, 3 July 2023

All Quiet on the Western Front
Original Title: Im Westen nichts Neues
Written by: Erich Maria Remarque
Central Theme: War Is Hell
Synopsis: The story of a young German man who volunteers to fight in WW I, told from his perspective.
Genre(s): War novel
First published: 29 January 1929
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"This book is to be neither an accusation nor a confession. It will try simply to tell of a generation of men who, even though they may have escaped its shells, were destroyed by the war."

All Quiet on the Western Front (Im Westen Nichts Neues) is a 1929 anti-war novel, set during World War I, by famous German author and war veteran Erich Maria Remarque. It's considered to be one of the greatest and most important works in the genre. The book was a best-seller when it was first released.

Many of the elements of the narrative correspond to Remarque's own experiences, and the book has strong autobiographic undertones.

All Quiet on the Western Front is narrated by a young soldier, former grammar school student Paul Bäumer. The horrors of trench warfare are described in a brutally realistic fashion. Further themes are comradeship and the soldiers' detachment from civilian life.

Adaptations:

The following tropes are common to many or all entries in the All Quiet on the Western Front franchise.
For tropes specific to individual installments, visit their respective work pages.
  • An Arm and a Leg: Paul's former classmate Albert Kropp has his leg amputated when they're wounded together. This makes him contemplate suicide, but he eventually accepts his fate. Earlier, Franz Kemmerich, another classmate of Paul's has his leg amputated, but he doesn't survive.
  • Badass: Kat. Also, that one guy who was mortally wounded and lived long enough to make sure the enemy fleet was wiped out.
  • Big Eater: Tjaden.
  • Bread, Eggs, Milk, Squick: Paul muses that they didn't learn anything useful at school: "nobody ever taught us how to light a cigarette in a storm of rain, nor how a fire could be made with wet wood - nor that it is best to stick a bayonet in the belly because there it doesn't get jammed, as it does in the ribs."
  • Bring My Brown Pants: A new recruit craps himself in his first fight. The veterans quietly tell him how to deal with it, and ask if he really thinks he's the first soldier ever to get the gun-shits.
  • But for Me It Was Tuesday:
    • At the beginning, Paul sits at the bed of his friend, Kemmerich, who had his leg amputated. When he realizes that Kemmerich is dying, he runs for the doctor:

Paul: Come quick, Franz Kemmerich is dying!
Doctor: (to an orderly) Which will that be?
Orderly: Bed 26, amputated thigh.
Doctor: How should I know anything about it? I've amputated five legs today!