Stylistic Techniques In Night By Elie Wiesel

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Stylistic Technique Essay In the book “Night”, by Elie Wiesel, the author uses stylistic techniques such as imagery and diction to achieve a particular purpose. In pages 61-65 Wiesel’s purpose was to show how he changes since the day he was deported. When he was deported to the concentration camps, he was scared and showed sympathy to the people dying and suffering. He witnesses babies getting tossed into pits of flames and his father getting slapped, and in both situations there was nothing he could do. However the longer Elie stayed at the camp, the more he changed into a new person. By Elie’s use of imagery and diction the readers notice the change and the influence the Halucuast had on Elie’s perception and personality.
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This is where-hanging here from this gallows…”. Elie has started to lose his faith and questioning if God is still loving and caring. He uses imagery, creating an imaginary representation of how God is in the gallows, revealing that God doesn’t want to help the Jews through these hard times. This shows Elie’s change in behavior because he used to be religious and a strong believer, but later he loses his faith.
Another example of Elie changing through the events is when he was forced to watch a little kid hanging on a rope for over a half an hour. Elie said, “His tongue was still red, his eyes not yet extinguished”. In the sentence you can see the imagery being used to show the boy was alive, and you could imagine the boy struggling on the rope with a red tongue and eyes intact. This obviously has an effect on Elie because it is not the norm for people to see others getting tortured for over thirty minutes daily. This lifestyle causes Elie to slowly get used to the dehumanizing and inhumane acts the SS officers did and brainwashed his perception.
Through the use of stylistic techniques such as imagery and diction in pages 61-65, the author Elie Wiesel achieves his purpose of revealing how the concentration camps influenced and changed his perception of the holocaust to the