Analysis Of Night By Elie Wiesel

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Elie Wiesel’s “Night” has shone an entirely different light in regards to the Holocaust and concentration camps. By means of doing so, this lets the audience see the emotional trauma that went on during these times. Elie Wiesel, the author of the nobel winning book “Night”, was born and raised in Sighet, Romania. He was tended for, alongside his three sisters. Once the age of 12 had dawned of him, he was relocated in order to live in his local concentration camp. He was tremendously fortunate in order to have survived and narrate the events that went on inside the camp. Simultaneously, the traumatic event taking place was indeed the Holocaust. This incident began from January 30, 1993 and continued to May 8, 1945. This activity took place mainly …show more content…

In paragraph 4, Wiesel inscribes, “No water, no blankets, less soup and bread. At night, we slept almost naked and the temperature was thirty below”. This sentence invokes the readers to feel the cold air on their bare skin, to feel the hunger and thirst the prisoners were also facing. He is using certain descriptions to make us feel the harsh realities of the Holocaust. This helps him achieve the purpose since it allows readers to get a view of their own on what it would be like to starve and be dehydrated in the camps. This gives a more dramatic effect to his work as it gives a physical feel to the reader. A second piece of evidence is found in paragraph 2. “They had transferred me to another Kommando, the construction one, where twelve hours a day I hauled heavy slabs of stone. The head of my new block was a German Jew, small with piercing eyes”, Elie Wiesel states. The following statement contains multiple pieces of imagery, including phrases such as; “piercing eyes” and “heavy slabs of stone”. These items help the reader feel a sense of visual and physical descriptive images. The reader can paint a better picture in their mind of what is going on inside the camp. By using these phrases in imagery, the audience grows soft and makes them feel sympathetic for the characters. This leaves a lasting impression on the innocent prisoners of the