In Night, by Elie Wiesel, literary devices are used to create a feeling that you're present and spectating the experiences Elie and his family have gone through. Using literary devices such as repetition and metaphor emphasize the dehumanization the Jews have gone through. The Jews are no longer familiar with themselves when looking at the mirror. All throughout the novel questioning, personification, imagery, and symbolism get used. All of these literary devices have shown the dehumanization that the Jews have gone through. Wiesel had questioned his surroundings and the events that will continue to replay in his mind. Witnessing these matters has harmed his whole being, preventing his life to return to normal. “Never shall I forget the small …show more content…
Symbolism can have a big impact on the chapter or the whole novel. The item symbolized has an influence on the character’s personality. It can either be a motto or an important artifact close to their heart in memory of a person they cared about or a memory from a tragic event that has happened in their life. “Three days later, a new decree: every Jew has to wear the yellow star” (11); this had to occur in order for the Jews to lose their identities so they will be all “equal” and their individual identities are to vanish. The Jews were restricted from going out of their house, “attend synagogue, to be in the streets after six o’clock in the evening” (11). Music is not only an enjoyment, but it is also a part of their identity and without it, they feel empty. A great example of having music a huge part of their life is Juliek. “‘All right, Eliezer… All right… Not too much air… Tired. My feet are swollen. It’s good to rest, but my violin…’” (93); The Nazis even took away the privilege to play any musical instrument like a violin, piano, or guitar. Beethoven’s music was forbidden to be played since he was a German composer and Jews were not allowed to interact or perform anything from the German culture. Juliek was so worried about his violin being shattered to pieces since music has been a huge impact on his life and he cannot see any way to live without his violin. To Juliek he can die with his violin and without it, he is gone. To normal civilians, the most suspenseful time of day is in the morning and afternoon, but for the Jews during night-time is a nightmare. The Nazis’ goal is to exterminate the Jewish race and for the Aryan race to rise. “Were this conflagration to be extinguished one day, nothing would be left in the sky but extinct starts and unseeing eyes” (21); the “extinct stars” are the Jews being exterminated and nobody is left to survive by the end of the
The novel Night by Elie Wiesel tells a devastating tale of a young man in concentration camp in World War II. Concentration camps were used in World War II to dehumanize and terrorize Jews. Dehumanization is the act of depriving humans of their rights and treating them as if they were worse than animals. Humans had been fighting for so long to get equality for everyone, but then Hitler rose to power and undid the work society had done. Many examples of how World War II used dehumanization were Hitler and his actions, leaving family members behind, and the labor camps in themselves.
Throughout the chilling memoir Night by Elie Wiesel we see a multitude of horrifying scenes. Elie was, in this book, tortured by the crushing actions of Nazi Germany. The entire Jewish population of Germany was targeted by Nuremberg laws created by Adolf Hitler, and each law aimed to dehumanize the Jews in one way or another. Elie Wiesel and other Jews were first labelled with yellow stars, then numbered, and by the end of it, they could barely recognize themselves. Chapter 6 page 83 says “We had forgotten everything-death, fatigue, our natural needs…., condemned and wandering, mere numbers, we were the only men on earth.” This quote exhibits dehumanization mainly in two words; “... mere numbers,...” These people were no longer people, they
In the memoir “Night” by Elie Wiesel, Elie, and all other Jews were reduced to being dogs, who follow the Nazis’ orders like slaves and will die at the Nazis command. The Jews were thrown into the crematory or gas chamber if the SS officers did not see that the Jews were fit they would have died. If they were sick, too old, too young, cannot work, they would only get thrown into the fire. Dehumanization is one of the worst act caused during the holocaust as it takes away the identity, humanity and
In May 1944, Elie Wiesel was fifteen years old when he and his family got transported to Auschwitz. In the concentration camps, many inmates were treated poorly and went under many “Monsters exist, but they are too few in number to truly be dangerous. More dangerous are the common men, the functionaries ready to believe and to act without asking questions.” (Primo Levi, Holocaust Survivor) Primo Levi was a Holocaust survivor that believed the common man was more dangerous than actual monsters. The common man is unpredictable and will sometimes act without a second thought. In the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel his gold tooth, the food rations, and their ID’s symbolize the dehumanization and the desperation of the Jews during the Holocaust.
Night, by Elie Wiesel, shares the terrifying power of a first-hand account of the Holocaust. Elie Wiesel was taken from his home in 1944, to Auschwitz, and then Buchenwald. Immediately, he was exposed to the brutalities he would face for a full year. One of them being, dehumanization. Nazi’s made conscious efforts to dehumanize the Jews. Although it started as the Jews not being able to own their personal belongings, through the progression of the Holocaust the Jews found themselves being stripped of their dignity. The Jews eventually were not even call by name, but were referred to by a number, “The three “veteran” prisoners, needles in hand, tattoo numbers on our left arms. I became A-7713. From then on, I had no other name.” (Wiesel, 42)
Dehumanization means depriving a person or group of positive human qualities. Elie Wiesel and the Jews are dehumanized the second they step into Buna. Elie Wiesel in Night shows how people can change when experiencing traumatic events. The horrors Elie went through during his time in the Holocaust are inhuman, but his dedication to surviving shows his immense willpower. When analyzing the memoir it is shown throughout that Elie feels dehumanized by the treatment of the Nazis and the torture he is suffering from.
Twelve-year-old Elie Wiesel spends much time on Jewish mysticism. His instructor, Moshe the Beadle, returns from a near-death experience and warns that Nazi aggressors will soon threaten the serenity of their lives. Even when the family and Elie were pushed to ghettos they remained calm and compliant. In spring, authorities begin shipping trainloads of Jews to the Auschwitz-Birkenau complex. In a cattle car, eighty villagers can hardly move and have to survive on minimal food and water.
Elie Wiesel use metaphor,rhetorical question, and metaphor to demonstrates that dehumanization ultimately causes negative,mental, and physical changes in victims. Wiesel use of metaphor to demonstrate the loss of humanity. For example in chapter four page 63 Elie Wiesel states that “These withered bodies had long forgotten the bitter taste of tears”. To show that they did not cry. They did nothing to not die.
In the novel Night, Elie Wiesel writes about his experience inside the concentration camps of Germany during World War II. He realizes how his humanity changes after he is free. Elie ponders about if he can be re-humanized after he passes trials, when he looks at a mirror. Wiesel uses a gloomy tone to reveal how Elie succeeds in survival through dehumanization.
In the memoir, Night , by Elie Wiesel is about Elie’s experience with the Holocaust. In the many work camps he traveled, he witnessed many cases of dehumanization. The word “Dehumanization” means a group of people assert the inferiority of another group. The humans that are inferior think that race of people shouldn’t deserve of moral consideration. When the Wiesel’s arrived at Birkenau, reception center for Auschwitz; Wiesel experienced his first case of dehumanization when he gets separated from his mother and his daughter. When he arrived at Auschwitz he gets tattooed a number; this is where the SS officers striped his birth name away. At Buna, Wiesel witnessed many followings because his fellow jews have committed crime. Throughout
In Elie Wiesel’s autobiography, “Night” there are many examples of dehumanization from start to finish. Dehumanization is stripping a person of every quality that makes them human. This includes their identity, individuality, and soul. The Night shows the process by which the Nazis reduced the Jews to little more than “things” which were a nuisance to them. The book takes place in World War 2, in the Holocaust. Eliezer and his family are very much directly affected by actions taken by the Nazis as well as all the other Jews. Throughout the whole book, the Nazis use practices such as beatings, starvation, theft of possessions, separation of families, crude murders, forced labor, and many more actions represented through the text of this book that are all examples of dehumanization. Eliezer, the narrator of the story, arrived at the concentration camp of Auschwitz when he was fifteen years old. He arrived by the transportation of cattle cars. Within the various camps, Eliezer spent ten months of abuse and dehumanization. He lost so much due to the Germans.
Elie Wiesel describes numerous ways people are stripped of their humanity. Elie and his father and those around him were dehumanized. I think this happened because they had lost hope to live on and because they experience such horrible thing in the concentration camp. I think this lasting impact had the people who in the concentration to forget who they were and forget that they are human.
Dehumanization is the denial of human rights. Night by Elie Wiesel depicts the events that dehumanized the Jews during the holocaust. Hitler dehumanized the Jews by stripping them of their identities, treating them like animals and making them turn on one another.
Elie Wiesel uses metaphors, Rhetorical questions and personification to demonstrate that dehumanization ultimately causes negative, mental, physical changes in victims.
A factor of Wiesel’s survival was his determination when he chose to not stop running during the flee to Germany to prevent from getting shot by the SS. On page 81, Wiesel expressed, “I repeated myself:’Don't think. Don't stop. Run.’” This section of the book is saying that he is very determined to stay alive at whatever cost. This section is important because he wants to stay alive no matter how hard it gets. The evidence connects to the quality because he is willing to run non-stop so he will not get shot. Also, most people who are determined would say something like that when completing a goal. The evidence shows me that the character is both mentally and physically strong. This quality will probably be problematic because it could get him killed or hurt, otherwise it will not be as problematic. The characters words/actions could lead him to his survival/freedom. Being determined could lead you to success, which could lead to