Heda Margolius Kovaly’s Under A Cruel Star is a captivating memoir that provides historical accounts during the time period when Czechoslovakia was under Nazi control and faced with Stalinism. Kovaly gives her personal first hand accounts on experiences in concentration camps, post-war struggles, and the life that she lived while under Communism. Contrasting with Under A Cruel Star, John Merriman’s A History of Modern Europe uses clear and concise mundane facts to provide the accounts of history during this era. Presenting history in a memoir makes the read effortless and alluring but it also takes away some of the factual significance that the textbook offers. History presented in this form differs from accounts during this time era written…
I have recently finished the book "Fever 1789" by Laurie Halse Anderson. It was filled with a roller coaster of emotion leaving the reader on the edge before every chapter. The description in the book fills my mind of how it was back in the 1700's. This book demostrats a good understanding of the environment and tone in the book. At the end of the book it shows real life sections of how Anderson used history into a fictional story. The other book i'm reading is "Night" by Ellie Wiesel. It shows a similiar dark approach to the book's setting. The book is based off Ellie's life in a concentration camp during the Nazi regime. Ellie was only just a young boy and he had to endure painful suffering. Watching the people die around you and seeing your…
PROTAGONIST: The protagonist would be Milda and all the innocent people that were captured or killed. Milda is the main character, an innocent Czechoslovakian girl which gets captured and taken away during the Holocaust. TEXTUAL EVIDENCE: “I was eight when the Nazis came. A week after their arrival we had visited Mama’s cousin in Prague, and I had seen the victory parade the Nazis held for Hitler. The soldiers had marched by fiercely, wearing tall black boots and black swastikas on their uniforms. We had been require to attend, and everyone had been forced to raise their right arm and say, ‘Heil Hitler!’” (page 13-14)…
There was no where to go. Michael couldn’t run and hide like he wished he could. It started when he was only nine years old. That moment will always be engraved in his mind. He can’t ever unsee the monet those NAzi’s walked into town and hurt that poor jew. The way the town got destroyed so quick was awful. All he wanted to do was help, He wanted to be able to make everything go back to normal. INstead his family ran for their own safety. What would you do if your life was endangered every second of everyday? Michael had more courage and bravery than anyone I have ever heard of. “Projekt 1065” by Alan Gratz” is set in Berlin, Germany at the start of World War 2. When the Nazi’s first invade the streets of Berlin. The way that the author`…
The book is called “Night” by Elie Wiesel. This book is a first encounter of the Holocaust where Germany prosecuted and sent Jews to camps to be prisoners and tortured or killed. In this personal encounter of Elie he is sent to Auschwitz along with his father, mother, and sister. Elie experiences terrible events that happen at the camp including his father's death and abuse. Throughout the book Faith and Terror were a huge part of the holocaust.…
Barbara Kingsolver’s “Stone Soup” is a personal response to society’s view of the “broken” family. Kingsolver believes that society has for too long criticized divorce, remarriage, single parenthood, gay parents, and blended families, and that alternative families deserve equal standing in our society. In response to reading Kingsolver’s essay, this paper will serve to show which parts of “Stone Soup” are supported by outside evidence and which are not.…
The article “Stone Soup” by Barbara Kingsolver has influenced my perspective majorly when it comes to viewing family types. Coming from a “broken family,” this article was interesting to read about and see the author’s viewpoint on divorce and family issues. I was a child when my parents divorced, and so I did not necessarily realize the impact of the decision they had made with each other; this new change did not process as a “bad” to me. According to Kingsolver, her daughter did not either. Her daughter saw the benefits of her parents separating: “...our house is in the country and we have a dog, but she can go to her dad’s neighborhood for the urban thrills of a pool and sidewalks for roller-skating” (Kingsolver 14). I relate to this because…
Reading the Holocaust by Inga Vivienne Clendinnen, who is an Australian author and historian, anthropologist and academic.…
The book called Night by Eliezer Wiesel is the true story of Wiesel’s experiences during the holocaust. Wiesel was born in the town of Sighet, Transylvania; he was a teenager when he and his family were taken from their home in 1944, and moved to the Auschwitz concentration camp. This book is Eliezer terrifying record of his memories about how Jewish people were transferred to concentration camps. Eliezer explains how the Nazis treated them like they were animals, made them work hard, and fed them little food. (the food given to them was only bread and soup). Because of the abusive treatment Eliezer witnesses and endures at the hands of the Nazis during World War II, he is stripped of his former self forever.…
2. Author and historical time period: The author of this novel is Ray Bradbury. As he was growing up around the early 1930s, Bradbury was horrified by the Nazis burning books and Joseph Stalin’s Great Purge. During the Great Purge, many writers and poets were incarcerated and often executed. These two events indicate political repression and destruction of intelligence.…
In The Book Thief, by Marcus Zusak, the narrator, Death, tells the life story of a young girl named Liesel Meminger during World War II. He explains the events and challenges Liesel experiences due to Hitler’s words and influence. In this passage, the author uses diction, imagery, and details to help the reader imagine and have a deeper understanding of the events taking place and the character’s thoughts and feelings.…
3. Schwab, Gerald. The Day the Holocaust Began: The Odyssey of Herschel Grynszpan. New York: Praeger, 1990.…
* Through young Wiesel’s eyes, readers travel into the hell of Hitlers death camp and into the darkness of a long night in the history of human race.…
During Hitler`s region, he and the Nazi region changed many lives of innocent people. Milkweed, a historical fiction by Jerry Spinelli, shows how the Holocaust impacted a multitude of people. Orphaned at an early age Misha, the protagonist, adopts the identity of an orphan gypsy a persona created by his friend Uri. Misha adapts that identity would eventually become Misha Milgrom- the Jew. Misha assumes the role as the Milgrom family “breadwinner”. After thousands of Jews including the Milgroms, are relocated to the ghetto of Warsaw, Misha learns to identify himself with the Jewish struggle, and to be a part of a family. Because of Hitler`s oppression region, Jews like Misha, the street gang of orphans, and the Milgrom family learn to rely on relationships to help boost their chances of survival if not survival of life then survival of humanity and hope.…
The Holocaust and WWII are two major events in world history that Bergen explores in both her book and essay. "War and Genocide" provides a comprehensive…