Rhetorical Devices Used In Ww2

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This documentary informs its viewers about what America did, or rather did not do, concerning the Jews of Europe during the Holocaust. The documentary charges America with not doing anything when having multiple chances to help the Jews escape the horrors that they were going to face by the Nazis. Those involved in making the documentary are the ones that are making the charges against America, along with the many people used in the documentary are resources of what America was doing concerning the Jews. This documentary uses many effective strategies and devices to show the audience that the charges against America are in fact true. One of the best strategies used is by showcasing the Klein family, with son, Kurt, reading the letters that he received from his parents who were stuck in Europe who kept being denied visas to enter America. This was an effective strategy because the viewers got to hear what families were going through being split across a continent and not being able to anything about it. Viewers got to see the anguish of Kurt as he read the last things he ever received from his parents who would eventually be murdered by the …show more content…

Music can make a scene more compelling because it adds emotion to a scene. For example, in the beginning of the documentary when the narrator was talking about Kristallnacht, there was a frantic orchestra accompanying his more and added sound effects of glass breaking. It makes a person feel more anxious and frightened of what is to come and sets the tone for the documentary, since the event of Kristallnacht is one of the best pieces of evidence as to why Jewish people need to be able to escape the terrors of Hitler’s control as soon as possible. Another example is when there would be a transition of a scene to the Klein family, and the music had a melancholy tune to it and it added more to the scene to draw out more emotion from the viewers.