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Wilfred Owen's Dulce Et Decorum Est

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Although the war period was extremely harsh for the world, many great widespread changes came about because of them. Even several new ideologies came about that altered people’s views of the world. World War I and World War II caused enormous movements throughout the world in the post-war eras. Post-World War I marked the end of the Enlightenment project. People looked to more radical solutions. There were advances in psychology that disputed traditional views of morality and standards. Sigmund Freud, an Austrian medical doctor, created Freudian doctrines that formed the psychiatric profession. Due to Freud, poets acknowledged his influence and imaginative poetry flourished. One example of poetry produced is “Dulce et Decorum Est” by Wilfred Owen. Part of the poem says, “To children, ardent for some desperate glory, The old Lie: Sweet and fitting is it to die for one’s country” (Blunden 66). This portrays the angry representation of the horrors of the war. In the decades between World War I and World War II, scholars examined and tested established traditions. People were dissatisfied with monarchs and were more supportive of the idea of democracy. According to Traditions & Encounters: A Brief Global History, “After the horrors and debilitating upheavals of the Great War, much of the world yearned for a return to normality and …show more content…
“Throughout most of World War II, Hitler had believed that the alliance of the communist Soviet Union, the imperialist Great Britain, and the unwarlike U.S. democracy would break up over ideological differences.” (Bentley, Ziegler, & Streets-Salter 625). As it became evident that the Allies were going to win World War II, the alliance between the Americans and the Russians started to fade. It became a competition for control of other regimes and systems. The United States did not trust communists and the USSR (the Soviet Union) did not trust

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