Cannon fodder: Difference between revisions
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* In the movie [[Starship Troopers (film)|Starship Troopers]], the motto for enlisting troops is "You want to live forever?", implying that enlistees may as well die serving in the armed forces as they will inevitably die. As the troops are invariably vastly outnumbered by the alien enemy, they can be seen as examples of "cannon fodder". |
* In the movie [[Starship Troopers (film)|Starship Troopers]], the motto for enlisting troops is "You want to live forever?", implying that enlistees may as well die serving in the armed forces as they will inevitably die. As the troops are invariably vastly outnumbered by the alien enemy, they can be seen as examples of "cannon fodder". |
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* In the first Blackadder series, the term is ''arrowfodder'', referring to the same term, before cannons. |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
Revision as of 16:02, 18 December 2005
Cannon fodder is an informal term for military personnel who are regarded or treated as expendable in the face of enemy fire. The term is generally used in situations where soldiers are forced to fight against hopeless odds, such as occurred during trench warfare in World War I. The term may also be used to differentiate infantry from other forces (such as artillery, airforce or the navy), who generally have a much better survival rate.
The term derives from fodder - food for livestock - but in this case soldiers are the metaphorical food sent against cannons. The term may have been introduced during the U.S. Civil War as a result of massed infantry charges against fortified enemy positions.
In video games, cannon fodder is a term for small, easily destroyable enemies, like those found within scrolling shooters. In fact, there was a game with the title Cannon Fodder produced in 1993 by Virgin Interactive.
Cultural and literary references
- The hero of the satirical novel The Good Soldier Svejk is drafted into the army as cannon fodder during World War I.
- The video game made light of the expression by portraying the deaths of the animated soldiers in the game humorously, and allowing the player to quickly replace lost soldiers with new ones.
- In the movie Starship Troopers, the motto for enlisting troops is "You want to live forever?", implying that enlistees may as well die serving in the armed forces as they will inevitably die. As the troops are invariably vastly outnumbered by the alien enemy, they can be seen as examples of "cannon fodder".
- In the first Blackadder series, the term is arrowfodder, referring to the same term, before cannons.
See also
- forlorn hope, the initial wave of troops attacking a fortress or other strongpoint, who usually took horrendous casualties.
- redshirt, a stock character in science fiction whose sole purpose is to die violently soon after being introduced. This idea was widely used in the Star Trek series.
- sacrificial lamb, a metaphorical reference for a person who has little if any chance of surviving an upcoming challenge, but seeks to sacrifice him or herself for the common good.