Night, written by Elie Wiesel, is a book that recounts the author's experiences as a Jewish teenager during the Holocaust. This book is intresting because it shows people who have never experienced or learned about the Holocaust the horrors of it. It shows poeple why history should never repeat and why people should tell there story. What would you do if history repeated and there was another Holocaust? In this essay, I will analyze and evaluate the effectiveness of the rhetorical strategies used by Wiesel to achieve his purpose, including his central idea, intended audience, and message, as well as his use of ethos, pathos, and logos throughout the book.
In Jane Yolen’s novel, The Devil’s Arithmetic, and Peter Fischl’s poem, “To The Little Polish Boy Standing With His Arms Up”, they talk about the Holocaust and how the Nazis were brutal and dehumanized the innocent Jews and the other people that they tortured. Both pieces of literature have similar purposes, but different tones. They each have different writing tools as well. Jane Yolen has a tone of pride and Peter Fischl has a tone of aggravation. Both authors have universal please and ask us to remember about the atrocity that the ruthless Nazis caused.
The Holocaust was a tragic event our history that all of us have heard about, but Elie Wiesel experienced it firsthand. After reading his book, Night, a novel describing his experience in a concentration camp, and his speech called Perils of Indifference, which talks about how humans shouldn’t be indifferent to problems, I decided that the book conveyed his message much more effectively because he displayed powerful emotion, has more themes, and writes it for everyone to read. In Night, Elie Wiesel is gives the readers a deeper understanding of his experience in the Holocaust by displaying more emotion than in Perils of Indifference. In the book, he gives his thoughts and decisions.
Two very different pieces of holocaust literature speak to their audience with similar purposes, yet unlike tones. Each author uses particular writing tools to drive these. Jane Yolen’s novel, The Devil's Arithmetic, is about the harsh conditions in the death camp, and has a tone of admiration for the Jews. Peter Fischl’s poem, To the Little Polish Boy Stand with His Arms Up, is a tribute to an individual in a ghetto.
Elie Wiesel, a male Holocaust survivor, once said: “The opposite of love is not hate, it's indifference” and “Indifference, to me, is the epitome of evil.” During the Holocaust, over eleven million innocent people were killed because of the hate and intolerance the Nazis had for them. Many people fight against the injustice of the Nazi party and without them hundreds more people could have died. Intolerance and hate were some main causes of the Holocaust, and the fight against it is shown in The Book Thief, The Whispering Town, Paper Clips, and Eva’s Story.
Through Wiesel’s journey through all the concentration camps, the reader learns about Wiesel’s horrifying memories of the camps, the death of his family, friends, and himself as a Jew during the height of World War 2. Through imagery, Wiesel shows the brutal treatment given to the prisoners, showing the emotional trauma prisoners had to endure. By choosing between staying silent or speaking out during horrific events, Wiesel shows how the choice someone makes, either will stop suffering or let it continue. The first way,
By using such heavy emotions, both authors were able to articulate their experiences with the Holocaust and those around them. The two authors also successfully managed to capture an audience that appeals outside of the works timeframe. With an event as memorable as the Holocaust, it’s not difficult to focus plenty of attention on the event, but both authors managed to appeal to people who could not possibly have any real insight on the happenings of the Holocaust. The
The Holocaust has affected people horrifically especially the less fortunate. The book Night, narrated by Elie Wiesel shows the experience of a young Romanian boy being a prisoner in the Holocaust. Based on the terrible treatment of the less fortunate as seen through the elderly and children in the book Night and the antisemitism in America, it is clear that humanity is essentially not good. Throughout the book Night, it is shown that humanity is essentially not good through the horrific treatment of elderly people.
Though there are many differences and variations in sources from the Holocaust, whether it be Night written by Elie Wiesel, Life is Beautiful directed by Roberto Benigni, or multiple accounts from Holocaust survivors from an article called Tales from Auschwitz by The Guardian, they all will agree that it was a terrible and unforgivable atrocity committed not only to the Jewish people, but all of mankind. One similarity that the three sources share, as baffling and terrifying as it
“For in the end, it is all about memory, its sources and its magnitude, and, of course, its consequences” (Wiesel 114). The Holocaust caused many hardships for different groups of people. One way this is demonstrated in the literature department is through Elie Wiesel’s memoir, Night. While some may argue that topics surrounding Night and the Holocaust are too heavy, it is important to learn about the struggle that daily life in the camps pressed on people, how unethical the boxcar and cattle cars treated everyone, and the negative impact Dr. Mengele (The Angel of Death) had on the prisoners inside the camps. One way the Holocaust affected people was the daily life in the camps.
Aristotle wrote, “It is during our darkest moments that we must focus to see the light (Aristotle)”. The Holocaust was one of the darkest times humanity has ever seen. A machination brewed by an extraordinarily perverse man that resulted in the deaths of millions, and robbed millions more of their faith and hope. Families were torn apart, towns were destroyed, and humanity lost, all to satisfy one man’s extreme racism and psychotic agenda. If however, one only chooses to focus on the darkness, they might overlook the light, specifically in the two stories of boys who survived against all odds and shared their tales years after defying death.
This excerpt reflects a sense of loss, dehumanization, and the struggle to maintain a sense of identity and belonging during the author's personal struggles throughout the Holocaust.
The effect of oppression are not limited to the Holocaust: “Where they have burned books they will end in burning human beings” is a quotation from Heinrich Heine, a 19th century poet, whom reminds the reader the great extent oppression may take. Heinrich Heine, a 19th century poet, reminds the reader the great extent oppression may take: “Where they have burned books they will end in burning human beings” proving the effects of oppression are not limited to the Holocaust.
Life as a Jew during the Holocaust can be very harsh and hostile, especially in the early 1940’s, which was in the time of the Holocaust. “Sometimes we can only just wait and see, wait for all the things that are bad to just...fade out.” (Pg.89) It supports my thesis because it explains how much the Jewish community as
Foreshadowing in Beowulf In the poem Beowulf, foreshadowing plays a great role in the plot of the epic poem. In the beginning of the play the narrator introduces Shield Sheafson who founded the Danes and rose to great power. The funeral of Sheafson foreshadows the death of Beowulf and his funeral processions.