Soontir C'boath wrote:I have a question that is based from my homework and I need help.
Ok i'm analyzing a poem about a a squad that is retreating from the front and going home tired etc. Until they hear gas shells and run...one of the soldiers died from the poison gas while retreating from the enemy. The man is put on a wagon and another soldier walks behind the wagon seeing the dead man as he march and says that the way he died does not go with the famed quote "It is sweet and dignified to die for one's country".
Now I know that poison gas is an undignified way to die....but what I don't understand is how is this a case of Individual vs Society..
Thoughts? Cause i'm stumped
Cyaround,
Jason
It's very easy, at least the way I see it.
Individually, it doesn't make sense to put yourself in a dangerous situation, even more when the personal potential gains are non existant. It's against every one of our instincts.
We fight willingly when our life is in danger, or of our loved ones. The people sent to Iraq are fighting not because they are feeling threatned, but because they're ordered to by the government (society). So, they're not following the basic instincts of self preservation we all have, as men.
The nation-state wars of the last centuries have been like that. Basically, the individual never had nothing to say about how the governments manage the crisis and the wars.
edit: For fucks sake, Iraq's just an example, probably not a good one. Replace it with the Napoleonic wars, instead. I didn't mean that the US military doesn't think the war is fair.