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Published byLeona Webb Modified over 9 years ago
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Night Introduction
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Publication - for ten years following his release from Buchenwald, Wiesel kept his story to himself - then, in 1954, he wrote a 862 page manuscript title And the World Remained Silent - originally published in France in 1958 - published in the USA in 1960
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Elie Wiesel - at sixteen, Wiesel and his family were forced to live in the Sighet ghetto (where Nazis confined “undesirables”) and then the entire Jewish community was sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau - separated from his mother and three sisters, he and his father were sent to the work camp at Buna - he was at Buchenwald when the camp was liberated in April 1945
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Memoir - a record of events written by a person having intimate knowledge of them and based on personal observation; an account of one’s personal life and experiences - creates an intensely personal, subjective, and intimate tone
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Memoir - Night is not meant to be an all inclusive history of the experience of the Holocaust; instead it details the harrowing personal tragedy, pain, and effect the experience created for one single victim
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Contrasts to Memoir - Wiesel however prefers to describe the work as “testimony” and is not the book’s protagonist - the narrator is a boy named Eliezer who represents Wiesel but there are differences in details - for instance, Eliezer wounds his foot in the concentration camp, while Wiesel hurt his knee - allows Wiesel to distance himself from the experience
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Purpose - Wiesel is interested in documenting the historical truth of events that took place as well as the emotional truth of Eliezer’s journey from a believing Orthodox Jew to a deeply disillusioned young man who questions the existence of God
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Moshe the Beadle - though he disappears after the first few pages, Moshe is central to understanding Eliezer’s struggle - he sets forth the key values that God is everywhere, even within every individual, and that faith is about asking questions, not receiving answers, concepts that Eliezer’s experience sorely tests
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Theme subjects - the struggle to maintain faith in a loving God in the face of ultimate evil - silence - man’s inhumanity to his fellow man - the importance of father-son bonds
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Symbols - fire - night
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