https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/19gG823id8py0yflKp9xIbchMLXNMTxZqKnKw5a03Krw/edit#slide=id.g21f49621_2_84
Five Main Points:
1. Four Humors are important
2. Lack of knowledge on how our bodies
work in the 18th century
3. Treatment methods
4. Blood circulation
5. How the diseases have
decreased over the years with new modern medicine
Thursday, October 18, 2012
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Five Talking points
1. The circumstances that people not in the war were living.
2. How people in the war were able to "adapt" back to their old lives.
3.How other countries were affected by the war
4.The realness of the war come to life.
5. the title all quite on the western front means.
2. How people in the war were able to "adapt" back to their old lives.
3.How other countries were affected by the war
4.The realness of the war come to life.
5. the title all quite on the western front means.
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Chapter 9!
Paul has just returned from leave and is curious as to the
fates of his entourage, especially Kat.
Being as no one is aware whether or not other men in his group have
survived Paul heads to the orderlies to see the fate of his men. Paul finds out his friends are still on the
front and instead of joining them waits three days and they return.
Upon return from the front they are forced into doing heavy
drills and are put through heavy inspection as the Kaiser is coming to the
front to personally inspect the troops. Paul explains that these drills are
more humiliating than being on the front and that the front is preferable to
the drills. The Kaiser eventually comes and delivers a few medals before
leaving. Upon the Kaisers departure the fancy uniforms are quickly confiscated
back.
Paul and the troops are disappointed by the appearance of
the Kaiser. They imagined him larger, more powerful and to have a thundering
voice.
Instead of going to Russia, Paul and his men are sent back
to the front. There they see a totally decimated line. Men laying naked having
been blown out of their clothes and body parts scattered. The soldiers become aware of how strong their
enemy is shortly before a long burst of machine gun fire, a bomb lands close to
Paul but narrowly misses him. Paul jumps into a trench and starts navigating
the trench but has forgotten the way back to camp. Paul ends up in no mans land where he comes
face to face with a French soldier. The two engage in hand to hand combat and
Paul stabs him 3 times. The French soldier falls and starts gurgling, Paul
realizing that he’s not dead starts trying to take care of him. Offering him
water and patches up his wounds. He finds a photo of a woman and a little girl
in the French Soldiers pocket book and offers to write to them and send money.
He later says that everything he promised he would do for this man he suggests
he probably would not do.
Paul waits until nightfall and crawls out of the hole to
find Kat and Albert went out searching for him. The next morning Paul tells his
comrades what he had done to the French soldier and was consoled.
Kat the Wise!
Kat is the oldest member of the group forty years of age at
the start of the novel, he is also the most experienced member of the group. A Cobbler in civilian life (Shoe maker), and
the primary mentor of the group. He shows his charisma by persuading the cook
to allow his small squad to eat the food that was rationed for the hundred some
men when only forty had arrived to eat. He has a sixth sense for finding food that the
other boys very much appreciate him for. In one incident he finds four boxes of
lobster and another time he finds some geese for the Men to cook and eat.
Kat is the most
positive member of the group, and the boys generally look up to him. He leads
his men by example and gets angry with them when they have a negative outlook
on their disposition. Kat is a survivor.
Kat is practical and humane, in one incident he finds a man
who had his thighs blown off, he was in intense pain and Kat was the one that
suggested that they do a mercy killing by putting the man out of his misery
rather than sit in the hospital bed for three days dyeing from a slow grueling
death. He is forced to stop from the
mercy killing by the return of the other soldiers from the front.
His death is
exceptionally traumatic to Paul as it is that point in the novel where Paul
gives up on life. Shrapnel from a mortar explodes wrecking Kats shin. Paul
realizing that Kat is hurt tries to carry him back to camp. On the way back to
camp Kat makes a small moan to which Paul urges him to hang on only to discover
upon his arrival back at camp that Kat had died on the way. A piece of shrapnel
that had hit him in the head. Kat had been the last member of his original
group to die. After this Paul is seen as the old man as many of the new
recruits are under seventeen.
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