Under Fire is Henri Barbusse's stark and immediate account of life in the trenches during the First World War.
Drawing upon his own service in the French army, Barbusse presents the war not as spectacle but as endurance-mud, fatigue, uncertainty, and the relentless proximity of death. The novel follows a small group of soldiers whose conversations and observations reveal the psychological strain of modern mechanized conflict. Rather than emphasizing strategy or heroics, Barbusse concentrates on the lived experience of ordinary men confronted with industrial warfare.
Written during the war itself, Under Fire stands as one of the earliest and most influential First World War novels. Its realism shaped later depictions of trench warfare and contributed to the broader literary response to twentieth-century conflict. Frequently studied in courses on modern European literature and war studies, the novel offers both historical immediacy and enduring moral inquiry into violence, solidarity, and survival.
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