In addition, there were eight people living in the annex and Anne was the youngest. These circumstances result in the inevitable bottling up of feelings, turning Anne into a quiet storm. Contradictory to what she seems like on the surface, on the inside, she has these feelings and opinions that, if it not for her diary, would have gone unnoticed. Anne writes that “It's not easy trying to behave like a model child with people you can't stand, especially when you don't mean a word of it” (Frank 82). So even though the Franks, van Pels and Pfeffer are to share a “home” until the war ends, there was obviously no agreement that stated they would all get along and be sincere. Anne continues in her entry, pouring out her angst and saying, “But I can see that a little hypocrisy gets me a lot further than myoid method of saying exactly what I think (even though no one ever asks my opinion or cares one way or another)” (Frank 82). Anne’s suppressed emotions are not being relieved since she rarely gets the kind of attention she seeks. Anne tends to mimic behaviors rather than to follow her instinct and speak her mind, only generating more internal turmoil. When Anne is not her typical quiet storm, she lets out an inspirational …show more content…
She endured persecution as an open Jew, held her own in the Secret Annex, and followed her father’s commands to “work and hope” until her last days on Earth (“The Whole Story” 1). Perhaps her greatest motivational impact behind working and hoping is her desire to be a “modern woman.” Throughout both the film and the diary, Anne expresses her desires to be more than a housewife, like both her mother and Auguste van Pels. In front of both women, Anne says that “I could never be a housewife. It’s like being in prison” (“The Whole Story” 1). She expresses some common aspirations that are often seen in the 21st century feminist movement. Anne wants more for women and for equality. Anne’s timelessness also comes into play when she expresses out to her father something that has been said since the beginning of time. As Anne is speaking to her father, she outbursts saying “I don’t want to hear that I’m like other girls! I’m not” (“The Whole Story” 1)! Anne wants to be different and is not afraid to speak out and be the person to blaze the trail for women, regardless of her situation. Anne’s urge to breach the gender gap is extreme for someone thought to have been an ordinary teen with a literary gift. Anne’s bluntness and moxie have led to an analysis that states “One of the most striking features that emerges from Anne's diary is the sense of the intensity of the emotions that she experiences as an adolescent” (“The Whole Story” 1). Anne is an