Respuesta :
The war novels before "All Quiet on the Western Front" they tended to romanticize what war was like, making others believe that war was a symbol of glory, honor, patriotic duty, and adventure, "All Quiet on the Western Front" sets out to show people how actually the war was: An unromantic vision of fear, meaninglessness, and butchery. World War I demanded this depiction more than any war before it—it completely altered mankind’s conception of military conflict with its catastrophic levels of carnage and violence, its battles that lasted for months, and its gruesome new technological advancements (e.g., machine guns, poison gas, trenches) that made killing easier and more impersonal than ever before.
Answer:
War books before the "Alles Quiet am Western Front" (All Quiet on the Western Front), they inclined to pure romance on the manner in which war was, making others feel that war is a symbol of grandeur, honour, patriotic duty and adventure. The First World War required this depiction more than any other war before it—it changed completely the way people viewed military conflict with their catastrophic levels of carnage and violence, their months long battles and their terrible new technological advances which made killing easier and more impersonal than ever before.
Explanation: