Feeling down, she could not quite express herself and wasn’t sure how to cope with her father’s death. The mix of emotions left her in a state…
He began studying with Moshe the Beadle. The two would talk and read for long hours over the mystical texts.…
In every writing piece, be it a news journal or a deep philosophical book, literary devices serve as the substructure for the assembly of tone. In “Night”, the narrator goes through intense emotions and by modifying the utilization of literary devices, predominantly diction, syntax and symbolism, tone accordingly shifts throughout the book; thus, it becomes noticeable how the character’s emotions go from outraged, to hopeful, to indifferent. Therefore by carefully altering the above mentioned literary devices during different moments of the book, Wiesel makes it clear the drastic change in his thoughts and feelings all through the most intricate part of his life.…
Imagery is a portrait that is painted in your mind, a portrait that makes you feel you are there. The Holocaust is full of disturbing and horrible images of death. Pictures of inhumanity that just make you sick looking at them. In many images you see the pale, unemotional faces whose lives were changed for eternity, and yet with these images some believe that the Holocaust did not happen. In the Holocaust there was mass genocide of over six million Jews. Also many ethnic Poles, gypsies, Soviet civilians, Soviet prisoners of war, disabled people, homosexual men, and political and religious opponents were targeted by the Nazis to be exterminated. Hitler’s ultimate goal during the Holocaust was to ensure the creation of an Arian race. Fortunately the Holocaust was ended in 1945 when Germany was defeated. There were many survivors of the Holocaust, one of them being Elie Wiesel. He would later write a novel called Night, which is about his life experiences during the Holocaust. There are many powerful and telling pieces of imagery in the novel Night, such being Elie’s first day at Auschwitz, the hanging of the child at the gallows, and Juliek’s last symphony.…
Ellen is not comfortable and feels out of place and therefore is not interested in social activities, she feels guilty about not having a very loving relationship with her mother a guilt that extends to not doing more for her mother when she was sick. Ellen often thinks of suicide and has a plan to commit it. Her depression has lasted longer than a month and affects her health by not eating correctly.…
Eliezer was one of the few survivors of the Holocaust and his experience left him thinking what compelled Hitler to do this, what stopped people from helping them? Many people think that hatred is responsible for the events in the book Night, and the Holocaust but in reality indifference was responsible for what happened. The indifferences that were the main causes of the Holocaust were how the Jews felt about the Nazis and God, how the townspeople felt, and how the Jews dealt with the warning signs.…
his love for Helga was made the reader understand how much he loved her. When Vonnegut…
All of the negativity Melinda is experiencing is causing her harm herself in ways that fit a depressed person's profit. “I have entered high school with the wrong hair, the wrong clothes, the wrong attitude. And I don’t have anyone to sit with. I am an Outcast”(Anderson 4). Melinda silence and loneliness made her feel like an outcast because she has no one to sit with. Melinda thinks that no one will help her unless they have something to gain from helping her. In Speak it states, “Heather moves to pat my pom-pom, but pulls her hand back. For a minute she looks like she’ll defend me. No,no, she won’t. It might interfere with her Plan”(Anderson 28). Due to the negativity that Melinda is experiencing it causes her to think that no one will help her. She thinks that she is not worth helping out. Melinda thinks that she is so uncool that she doesn’t think no one will invite her to a party. “This year Rachelle is going to a party thrown by one of the exchange students’ host families…. I knew I wouldn’t get invitation. I would be lucky to get an invitation to my funeral with my reputation”(Anderson 41). Melinda’s negative thought makes her lower her self esteem because she thinks that she's a loser. If Melinda spoke to Rachelle about how she felt maybe things would have been different and she wouldn’t feel this way. The negativity makes Melinda into more of a depressed person.…
Thousands, if not millions, of people around the world are plagued by the false belief that suicide will solve their problems. Characters in the novel Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout are no different. The novel consists of several short stories that weave together the complex life of protagonist Olive Kitteridge, an abrasive, strong-willed middle school teacher. Olive’s interactions with others like her family and former students reveal an underlying fascination with depression and suicide among several characters, including her former student Kevin Coulson, his mother, Olive’s son Christopher, her father, and even herself.…
In the poems “We grow Accustomed to the Dark” by Emily Dickinson and “Acquainted with the Night” by Robert Frost, both poems talk about night time in a way that also contrasts to life and its difficulties, and how people are sometimes ignorant to things when they are in the dark.…
This poem still relates to the world we live in because many people still commit suicide without anyone knowing what they've planned, or what they're going through many people may…
Dehumanize (verb): To deprive of human qualities or attributes; divest of individuality. This definition scarcely scratches the surface of the horrifically inhumane conditions the Jewish people were placed under by the Nazis during the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel was dehumanized, and as a result of this dehumanization he became numb. At the beginning of the novel, Elie was a naïve young Jewish boy with an incredibly strong faith, who wept “over the destruction of the temple” (Wiesel 14). By the end, years of concentration camp life have broken his spirit and Elie is no longer fazed by the death and torture occurring all around him (Wiesel 103). This numbness manifests itself in varying ways throughout Night, each more disheartening than the last. First, Elie loses his faith in God. He then becomes selfish, disregarding others completely at times. Finally, Elie loses his will to live, deciding that suffering is no longer worth it. Dehumanization occurs countless times during this memoir, and affects each of its victims differently.…
The horror and atrocities at Auschwitz have stripped millions of people from their humanity and have demonized them into beasts. This form of dehumanization occurs several times throughout the novel Night, by Elie Wiesel. There were unfortunate situations in which family, friends, and strangers would demolish each other for a miniscule quantity of bread. Another prime representation of the newly discovered brutality is when friends would betray each other to withstand another day in hell for an excess ration of whatever remains. By instinct, a person would attempt anything to persist on in the world, even if it means losing a grip on reality and taking a step closer to brutality. Elie Wiesel does in fact escape his ghastly fate by standing by his father’s side, and successfully resisting temptation.…
Elie Wiesel recalled a moment where he felt devoured by reality when he saw that, “men, women, and children were being burned and that the world kept silent!”(Wiesel 55). Knowing that there were people that could’ve avoid this situation can acknowledge anguish ness. Two sententious themes for inhumanity is the loss of religious faith and the animalization of humans.…
Picture this: “Divorced parents, one of them get married, and while they go traveling around the world, you get stuck with the one parent that knows nothing about you. This means going to a new school, making new friends, and some major adjustments to your life. You don’t seem to fit in with anyone. That is until something, or better yet, someone, unexpectedly changes your life” This is what Twilight is about. It is a novel written by Stephenie Meyer. She takes us on a trip in our imagination, where vampires and werewolves exist. In her book, even rivalry among vampires exists. In Twilight, new relationships are built upon trust, and love conquers all.…