Modern readers return again and again to his words because their powerful message delineates a dehumanization vastly surpassed by modern technological warfare.Īn interview from the state archives in Osnabruck gives the reader some understanding of Remarque's reasons for writing All Quiet on the Western Front. The world would read his words and understand the questions of his generation, and the critics would treat his book kindly. Again and again, Remarque would return to scenes of the war and to postwar Germany for subjects of his novels. This one huge and overwhelming event in his life - World War I - would haunt him forever and influence practically everything he would write. Remarque, like many of his lost generation, suffered postwar trauma and disillusionment. During the time he had been in combat, his mother had died and now he had time to mourn and regret. His earlier dreams had included becoming a concert pianist, but, because of war wounds, that ambition was no longer a possibility. When Erich Maria Remarque was mustered out of the Great War in 1918 on a medical discharge, he returned home to a life devoid of hope and changed forever.
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