Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Essay --

Popular representations of fight encompass how different generations and societies take a crap seen, witnessed and explained or justified fights through with(predicate) the use of language, literature, visual arts and later, films. Contemporary state of fight refers to the new concepts, weaponry, and technologies that have been used at the beginning of WWII to the present measure period. Over the years that have passed, the methods and concepts have assumed newer complex forms, mainly due to widespread use of information and applied science and withal modern armies that have constantly upgraded to preserve their scrap worthiness. Furthermore, contemporary war has sought the greater inclusion of civilians and civilian infrastructure as targets in destroying a nations capability of waging war. As an apt corollary of popular representations of war, bell ringers epic poem, The Iliad, tries to show its au soundnce the suffering and loss caused by war, in his time period. In addi tion, some of the main themes in popular representations of war are, for example, the theme of wrath and revenge, motives that have been the start of many wars and the theme of military prowess. However, The Iliad can also be seen as a misleading corollary that disconnects from popular representations of war through the centuries, due to the fact that it excludes the theme of battle or combat suffering, since in The Iliad, soldiers die instantly, whereas the author does not expose to the readers the suffering accompanying so many wounded soldiers, who die a slow and un-hero like death. Using adequate quotes from The Iliad, Lokesson, Shay, and opposite outside sources, we will try to understand how The Iliad is an apt and a misleading corollary to understand popular representations of war.The Greek ancient ... ...wn us a less sizable affair, involving many conflicting needs and many more possibilities of dissent. Overall, one thing remains clear, whether in The Iliad or in other depictions of war through the times, it is the four-year-old that are sent to the battlefield, either to gain glory or to die, thus, as Herbert Hoover once said Old men declare war. But it is the juvenility that must fight and die. The Iliad is no different, as it clearly shows us that war is waged by those that can physically fight it, that show the bravery and masculine neck for the affair and that have something to gain (or lose) from it. The Iliad thus, becomes perhaps, one of the greatest depictions of how war is fought and why it is fought, and the pathos it brings to all it touches. If we still read it 2,500 years or so, after it was written, it must conjure powerful feelings with which we still identify. Essay -- Popular representations of war encompass how different generations and societies have seen, witnessed and explained or justified wars through the use of language, literature, visual arts and later, films. Contemporary war refers to the new concep ts, weaponry, and technologies that have been used at the beginning of WWII to the present time period. Over the years that have passed, the methods and concepts have assumed newer complex forms, mainly due to widespread use of information and technology and also modern armies that have constantly upgraded to preserve their battle worthiness. Furthermore, contemporary war has sought the greater inclusion of civilians and civilian infrastructure as targets in destroying a nations capability of waging war. As an apt corollary of popular representations of war, Homers epic poem, The Iliad, tries to show its audience the suffering and loss caused by war, in his time period. In addition, some of the main themes in popular representations of war are, for example, the theme of wrath and revenge, motives that have been the start of many wars and the theme of military prowess. However, The Iliad can also be seen as a misleading corollary that disconnects from popular representations of war t hrough the centuries, due to the fact that it excludes the theme of battle or combat suffering, since in The Iliad, soldiers die instantly, whereas the author does not expose to the readers the suffering accompanying so many wounded soldiers, who die a slow and un-hero like death. Using adequate quotes from The Iliad, Lokesson, Shay, and other outside sources, we will try to understand how The Iliad is an apt and a misleading corollary to understand popular representations of war.The Greek ancient ... ...wn us a less tidy affair, involving many conflicting needs and many more possibilities of dissent. Overall, one thing remains clear, whether in The Iliad or in other depictions of war through the times, it is the young that are sent to the battlefield, either to gain glory or to die, thus, as Herbert Hoover once said Old men declare war. But it is the youth that must fight and die. The Iliad is no different, as it clearly shows us that war is waged by those that can physically fig ht it, that show the bravery and masculine love for the affair and that have something to gain (or lose) from it. The Iliad thus, becomes perhaps, one of the greatest depictions of how war is fought and why it is fought, and the pathos it brings to all it touches. If we still read it 2,500 years or so, after it was written, it must conjure powerful feelings with which we still identify.

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