Night Notes The story that can never be told. Denying His Own Truth “Night, then, is written in the knowledge of its own inevitable failure: the survivor.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
SWBAT identify and analyze events of the Holocaust that had a direct effect on Elie Wiesel’s life by taking Cornell Notes from a PowerPoint.
Advertisements

 Eliezer Wiesel – author, narrator. 12 years old in the beginning of the story and 15 when he enters the concentration camps  Cholmo – Elie’s father.
Night by Elie Wiesel Study Guide Notes. Night Study Guide Notes  The original title Elie Wiesel gave the novel was And the World Has Remained Silent.
Topic Sentence, Introduction, Quotation, Analysis
Night Chapter Questions
THE BARRETT BOWL Night Edition. Rules No name calling No whining  Use of Notes on any Round = 2 point deduction Remember to keep your voices low when.
The story of a Holocaust survivor
Night Study Guide Notes The original title Elie Wiesel gave the novel was And the World Has Remained Silent. He wrote this book after 10 years of silence.
Night Elie Wiesel Study Guide Notes.
THE HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR LITERATURE BY: AYSHEH ABUSHANAB.
Night By Elie Wiesel.
HOLOCAUST The Final Solution HOLOCAUST RESULTED IN THE DEATH OF 6 MILLION JEWS 4-6 MILLION OTHERS (“INFERIORS” - SLAVS, GYPSIES, POLES, THE.
NIGHT by Elie Wiesel SOAPStone.
CAHSEE BOOTCAMP Distinguishing different essay styles ~Ms. Gieser Biographical Narrative Biographical Narrative Expository Essay Expository Essay Response.
Night Introduction. Publication - for ten years following his release from Buchenwald, Wiesel kept his story to himself - then, in 1954, he wrote a 862.
Section 3 Introduction to Birkenau/ Auschwitz
Elie Wiesel By: Courtney Elmore. Born on September 3, 1928 in a small town in Sighet, Transylvania.
(In your comp book on the page you wrote NIGHT) ChapterPages
Night by Elie Wiesel. Why are we reading it? It’s a memoir It’s a reminder of what happened so history does not repeat itself – “He [Elie] tells the story,
EVENTS ELIE WIESEL THEMESPEOPLEVOCAB.
Night Literary Devices Chapters 5, 6, 7, 8, & 9
“from Night” “from April in Germany” - WWII Holocaust Literature.
“Hitler won’t be able to do us any harm…” “The Germans won’t get as far as this.” “The yellow star? Oh well, what of it? You don’t die of it…”
Term to Know: MOTIF. Definition of Motif A motif in literature is a WORD, CHARACTER, OBJECT, IMAGE, or IDEA that recurs and usually bears an important.
Night Vocabulary Correct or Not Correct How to Write.
BY ELIE WIESEL Night. Driving Questions Why is it important to be educated about genocides of the 20 th century? Why is it important that we inform the.
Night Reflection Questions
Night Jeopardy True or False Characters Plot Characters 2 Q $100
Elements of a Short Story Plot is the sequence of events in a story.Plot Setting is the time and place in which the action of a story occurs.Setting Theme.
Historical & Emotional References. Memoir: a record of events written by a person having intimate knowledge of them and based on personal observation.
Night By: Elie Wiesel The S.S. Exposition Auschwitz Rising Action
Night final review Ch. 1Ch. 2-3 Ch. 4 Ch. 5Ch. 6-9Characters
JEOPARDY VocabularyCharacters Chapter 1Chapter 2 The Author & more $10 $20 $30 $40 $50.
Body Paragraphs Tips and Guidelines for Writing Strong Body Paragraphs.
 1. What are the conditions of the cattle wagon?  2. How was Mrs. Schachter able to see the flames from the furnace beforehand?  3. What is tone? 
Holocaust 2. What is: Holocaust? Killing of 6,000,000 Jews Trying to enact genocide on the Jewish people By 1938 The German people had seen enough propaganda.
1. Where did Elie grow up? Give the town and country. 2. What year did the story begin? How old is Elie? 3. What does Elie want to study? How does his.
Night Test 1. Did Eliezer always live in concentration camps? ________________________________________ Yes, Eliezer always lived in concentration camps.
Book Report on Night By Jenny Batchellor. Table of Contents l about the book l setting l characters l Plot Elements l Theme l Recommendation l Conclusion.
NIGHT Section 2. HUMANKIND One of Wiesel’s concerns that is brought up in this memoir is the exposure to inhuman cruelty and how it can cause people to.
A NONFICTION JOURNEY OF EVIL AND UNSPEAKABLE HORROR THAT SHOULD NEVER OCCUR AGAIN. Night by Elie Wiesel.
The Personal Narrative Writing about a small moment in your life.
The Holocaust HA2 - Spring. Aim: Why did Hitler carryout The Holocaust? Discussion: Why did Hitler use The Jewish people as a scapegoat.
Chapter-by-chapter plot summary
Night Trivia and Test Review Question 1  Why was Moshe the Beadle deported and how did he survive?  Foreigner, pretended to be dead.
Night Father/Son Relationships. What is the central idea? Conflict between self- interest and our concern for others.
By Elie Wiesel “The Holocaust is a central event in many people’s lives, but it has also become a metaphor for our century. There cannot be an end to speaking.
Welcome! D1/W25 Take out your IAN and open to the “Notes” section. Write “Narrative Writing” and today’s date at the top of the page.
EVENTS ELIE WIESEL THEMES PEOPLE VOCAB
Quick Review 1. What are the conditions of the cattle wagon?
Quick Review 1. What are the conditions of the cattle wagon?
Analysis Questions: Night and the Holocaust
Introduction to Night By: Elie Wiesel.
Book report on Night By Gina Spiotta and Paul Hoerbelt.
Open-Ended Responses and essays
Night by elie wiesel.
The Holocaust All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
Introduction to Night English 9B.
Night Literary Devices Chapters 5, 6, 7, 8, & 9
Elie Wiesel Page COS – 1a 2010 COS – RL ; Rl ; RL ; W ; W ; W ; W ; SL ; L ;
Motifs, Themes, and Symbols
THE HOLOCAUST LEARNING GOAL:
Night Analysis: Chapter 3 (p.29-34)
Term to Know: MOTIF.
Presented by: Brianna Gonzalez
Night Pages 3-28.
Night Writing Prompts.
Presentation transcript:

Night Notes The story that can never be told

Denying His Own Truth “Night, then, is written in the knowledge of its own inevitable failure: the survivor must tell his story, but will never communicate the truth of his experience; what is kept silent is more true than what is said, words distort and betray, the Holocaust cannot be understood or described, the constraints of reality ensure that the story will always fall short of the truth.” – Colin Davis

When words fail Broken narrative – unfinished stories Father’s anecdote Words take on new meaning sleep “The yellow star? So what? It’s not lethal.”

Literary Devices Direct Comment Wiesel interrupts his description of events “The ghetto was ruled by neither German nor Jew; it was ruled by delusion” (12). Reader’s Knowledge of History Night – written in terse, telegraphic style Wiesel avoids commentary and relies on reader to fill in the gaps. Auschwitz – (27) “In the air, the smell of burning flesh” (28).

Lit Devices (cont’d) Warning and Premonition Moishe Mrs. Schachter Camp inmate (30) Elie’s direct comment “our race towards death had begun” Retrospective Viewpoint Years later, many years later Lets us know what Elie did NOT know

Lit Devices Cont’d Repetition of Themes Father/Son Relationships Bela Katz Rabi Eliahou Train incidnet Elie’s guilt/relief Loss of faith/innocence Preparation of Effects Food brought to children