In 1941 through 1945 there were many atrocities happening at once which destroyed many places around the world during World War II, but there is one specific event that impacted Europe by terrorizing many people, which was the Holocaust. At just 15 years old Elie Wiesel, author of the memoir Night witnessed the Holocaust first-hand, and he realized that it was vital to share his story with the world so people would be aware of what happened and avoid repeating mistakes in the future. In the memoir Night, Elie Wiesel uses imagery, hyperbole, and personification to make the story more realistic for the readers. These 3 types of figurative language help the reader to understand the experience that Elie and the Jewish community went through. The true story Night uses multiple of literary devices to help …show more content…
On page 28, Wiesel uses that figurative language when he describes “A wretched stench floated in the air.” This quote is a good example of imagery because it describes what the true horror Elie experienced. The second type of figurative language Wiesel uses in his memoir is hyperbole. On page 57, he uses that figurative language when he describes “I wanted to run away, but my feet were nailed to the floor.” This quote is a good example of hyperbole because it illustrates how Elie felt to help readers understand and imagine the scene more clearly. The third type of figurative language Wiesel uses in his writing is personification. On page 14, this figurative language is used when he describes “The shadows around me roused themselves as if from a deep sleep and left silently in every direction.” This evidence is a strong example of personification because it describes the tension in the room to help readers understand this part of the story on a deeper level. By using a variety of figurative languages in his memoir, Elie Wiesel was able to make the story more realistic and detailed for the
Using such harsh imagery and descriptive detail when giving Wiesel's speech elicits strong emotional responses from the audience, making the audience empathetic to Wiesel’s purpose for his
He uses these things by telling us his personal story from the holocaust. But unfortunately Elie Wiesel died on July 2nd, 2016. Wiesel appeals to the audience’s emotions with imagery and he does this throughout the whole book. He appeals to our emotions by making us see him as a human body unlike the SS officers and German soldiers did and lets us know that it is never ok to treat other humans like the jews were treated. It also
“ I succeeded in digging a hole in that wall of dead and dying people.” This shows a disturbing tone by describing and painting a picture for the readers to visualize what the Nazi made him do. Another sense Wiesel used was touch. “ I scratched, I fought for a breath of air.” This is also showing a disturbing tone because it shows how the Jews had to fight just to take a breath of air and that they are struggling just to survive.
A style device that Wiesel uses to develop his understated style is the use of sentence fragments. He uses these to convey shock from the trauma that he went through in the concentration camps at a young age. An example of this is when he writes, “Spring 1944.” This helps the reader understand that he only knows the blatant facts on the situation. Another example of Wiesel’s understated style through the use of sentence fragments is, “The eight days of Passover.”
In the memoir “Night” by Elie Wiesal, Wiesal himself is explaining his story, and personal experiences from the Holocaust of 1933-1945. This event is one of the most unbelievable times in history. Elie tells his story, in hopes that it will prevent history from repeating itself. The Jews went through not just internal hell, but had to live it everyday. They were treated like objects, animals, and nonentities.
78 years ago, an event that killed millions occurred, known as the Holocaust. It involved German Nazis torturing and mass murdering European Jews over the span of about 12 years. Although there are many stories and novels about the Holocaust, one stands apart from the others. The title of this book is “Night”, by Elie Wiesel. In this short novel, Wisiel tells the story of his life as a teen boy living in fear of the Nazis and his traumatizing experiences.
By comparing the atrocities of the Holocaust to something that the reader can relate to or has experienced, similes can help create a deeper emotional connection and understanding of the events. The poem, Homesick, talks about the author returning home. The author states, “Here the weak die fast as a feather” (2). Feathers are easy to destroy and pull apart, those who were weak during the Holocaust were easy to get rid of and destroy. In the novel, Night, by Elie Wiesel, as the wind blows violently, Elie’s block was marching, he states “I was putting one foot in front of the other, like a machine” (85).
The crime against humanity known as The Holocaust started with the initial establishment of concentration camps in 1933, and was brought to an end in 1945 with the conclusion of World War II. In May of 1944, Elie Wiesel and his family were deported to Auschwitz, and in January of 1945, Elie and his father were evacuated to Buchenwald. Night is a personal memoir that follows Elie’s journey through this Dante-esque Hell. Elie Wiesel’s autobiography is a perfect example of bildungsroman, as its entire premise is to show the effects of the Holocaust on the psyche of an idealistic young man whose faith undergoes the most severe test one could imagine. Elie applies literary strategies such as characterization, conflict, irony, juxtaposition, suspense
“To the anti-Semitic Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, Jews were an inferior race, an alien threat to German racial purity and community. After years of rule in Germany, during which Jews were consistently persecuted, Hitler’s “final solution”–now known as the Holocaust–came to fruition under the cover of world war, with mass killing centers constructed in the concentration camps of occupied Poland.” (“The Holocaust”). Many Jews did happen to survive the Holocaust and many decided to share their story with the whole world. Elie Wiesel’s story Night is an autobiography about his experience as a Jew back when the Holocaust was taking place.
Wiesel uses imagery to expose the reader to the unsettled mood there is. “Behind the black gate of Auschwitz.” “Wrapped in their torn blankets, they would sit or lie on the ground, staring vacantly into space.” “And that ship, which was already on the shores of the united states, was sent back.” (Wiesel).
There are many examples of rhetorical devices and strategies presented within this speech, but the few that stand out the most are the use of pathos, anaphoras, and point of view. Elie Wiesel utilizes these rhetorical strategies throughout the speech to make the audience feel guilty as well as to come to an understanding of the atrocious events that occurred. Elie Wiesel structures the speech to move people and hopefully create peace activists like himself. Elie begins the speech by describing how a young boy who should be ignorant of most evils had come to know pain and anguish for the prematurely.
Ezra Jenks Mr. Delgado English 10.7 31 March 2023 Horrors that convey the holocaust The atrocities of the Holocaust have left scars not only on the victims but also on the collective history of the world. One of the most poignant testimonies of these atrocities is Night, written by Elie Wiesel. A first-hand account of his experiences in the concentration camps, this book is a testimony to the resilience of the human spirit and the unspeakable horrors that humans are capable of inflicting upon each other. Elie Wiesel's Night effectively conveys the horrors of the Holocaust and its lasting impact on survivors and society.
Wiesel aimed to express the tragic events through the writing of the book, but there are various mediums people used to express themselves and the events they experienced and witnessed. To illustrate, visual art helped people perceive the events by being able to see the events, poetry helped people interpret and visualize
Wiesel brings out syntax for the ending of his speech but also incorporates pathos wrapping it all back together with the sadness and pity on all of us for the harmful silence done to the jews in the holocaust. Syntax was the most obvious rhetorical device used because you can physically see how it is being presented differently than the rest but also sending a message and not being so formal about it. Pathos was a very huge part to Wiesel’s whole entire speech as he was constantly trying to turn everyones thoughts and perspectives to what he was exactly seeing in his own eyes. Elie Wiesel wanted to show the world the horrible act of indifference and how it has personally affected him as a child and for his whole life growing up. Wiesel manages to create many viewpoints and to throw us in his shoes for us to understand the inhumanity of the ones had no sympathy towards the jews during the holocaust.
In two years, 1.1 million people were starved, beaten, and murdered by the Nazi party in just Auschwitz's concentration camp alone; there were at least twenty-seven main camps. Arguments have arisen regarding whether Night by Eli Weisel, a memoir that depicts such horrific acts, is appropriate or necessary for high schoolers to read. A written work such as Night prevents the repetition of history when read and analyzed by the new generations due to its blatant language regarding the events that took place. Throughout Night, Wiesel's overt and figurative language allows the reader to fully understand the horrible events he first-handedly experienced.