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How Have the Attitudes of War Been Portrayed in Different Social Classes?

Autor:   •  January 29, 2013  •  Essay  •  397 Words (2 Pages)  •  1,429 Views

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How have the attitudes of war been portrayed in different social classes?

POLITICIANS

Throughout "Oh what a lovely war" it continually shows both life at home and the battlefield. This juxtaposition of these images shows how naive the people at home were. The newspaper were being controlled by the politicians who had the power to alter the headlines and produce the information that they wanted to be received by the public. From the viewpoint of the politicians the war was all about what could be gained "21,000 AMERICANS BECAME MILLIONARIES DURING THE WAR" The use of capital letters could not only be there for a visual purpose but to reinforce the urgency in the message and how appalling it really is. "21,000" is 1/3 of the amount of people who died on the first day alone of The Battle of the Somme. This statistic could have been used as a form of satire to highlight the fact that people were taking the severity of the war for granted. The pinpoint on the "Americans" was a common idea in WW1. Many of the other governments believed that they did not play their part well enough to benefit greatly from the war.

How have the attitudes of war been portrayed in different social classes?

POLITICIANS

Throughout "Oh what a lovely war" it continually shows both life at home and the battlefield. This juxtaposition of these images shows how naive the people at home were. The newspaper were being controlled by the politicians who had the power to alter the headlines and produce the information that they wanted to be received by the public. From the viewpoint of the politicians the war was all about what could be gained "21,000 AMERICANS BECAME MILLIONARIES DURING THE WAR" The use of capital letters could not only be there for a visual purpose but to reinforce the urgency

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