Reality Check
It’s
almost like you’ve been personally hit with one bombardments, when you see this
picture it puts everything we have been reading about into perspective. Okay
not literally, but seeing this photo is truly a smack in the face. This picture
highlights the factual horrors of the war, where over the past 6 chapters we
have read about it and took the words into our own imaginations. You can relate
this picture to the book in many ways, with the constant commotion and
sickening actions of the war. In the book, the diction allows us to visualize a
lot of what Paul Baumer sees “beside me a lance-corporal has his head torn off.
He runs a few steps more while the blood spouts from his neck like a fountain.”
(page 115) With gruesome and immense detail the book is able to showcase the
raw information. When you see this picture, it is understood that the men are running
away from an explosion, with has masks and bayonets in their hand
correspondingly to a scene from All is Quite on the Western Front when teer gas
hits the soldiers, when reading about Pauls experience “Inside the gas-mask my head booms and roars--it is nigh
bursting. My lungs are tight, they breathe always the same hot, used-up air,
the veins on my temples are swollen. I feel I am suffocating” readers are able
to relate to their senses and connect the pain that we aren’t able to witness
when just looking at the picture. In contrast to what we are visually seeing in
both the book and image, we are not able to connect the emotional side of
things by just viewing a picture or getting descriptions of actions in the
book. There is an underlying sense of comradeship that is displayed throughout
the book “But by far the most important result was that it awakened in us a
strong, practical sense of esprit de corps, which in the field developed into
the finest thing that arose out of the war-- comradeship.” Readers saw this in
the earlier chapters of the book, where the only thing the soldiers had was
each other. However, as the you carry on reading it is shown that during
bombardments the soldiers feel completely alone. We are not able to see this side
of the war when viewing a picture nevertheless by reading we can get a sense of
the emotional pain that goes into the war as well, “We have lost all feeling for
one another. We can hardly control ourselves when our glance lights on the form
of some other man. We are insensible, dead men, who through some trick, some
dreadful magic, are still able to run and to kill.” (page 116) The ability to
be aware of the emotions that the soldiers are going through helps anyone get a
better sense of the war rather than just viewing a picture. Both the text and
image allow readers the get a better understanding of the horrors of war
however one allows you to visualize things while the other helps you connect
everything and gives readers the bigger picture.

Superb work there Delani, you made sure to include some opinion in your blog and some extent of interest. Don't take this as an offence though because I find your blog a little to long which often makes the reader loss attention
ReplyDeleteAll points made are valid and the sentiment is true: it is hard to see everything by looking or reading. You need some sort of thing to evoke emotion in order to understand that era. However, your grammar is in desperate need of fixing. Some of your points are harder to understand because of the grammar problems.
ReplyDelete