history figurative language plot iplot iimotifs 10 20 30 40 50
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History Figurative Language Plot I Plot II Motifs
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• Name two factors that contributed to the Holocaust leading up to WWII.
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• National Indifference• Treaty of Versailles• Anti Semitism• Depression• Hitler’s charisma
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• Name four different types of victims targeted
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• Jews• Gypsies• Handicapped• Polish people• Soviet prisoners• Homosexuals• Jehovah’s Witnesses• Political prisoners• Black Europeans
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• Name two methods of killing the Nazi’s adopted prior to adopting the Final Solution.
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• Killing Squads• Euthanasia
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• In what city does this memorial stand? What does it represent? Name two.
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• Berlin• Nuremberg Laws
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• This term is a violent riot against a group of people condoned by the forces of law.
• An example would be Kristallnacht
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• Pogrom
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• Three days after the liberation of Buchenwald I became very ill with food poisoning. I was transferred to the hospital and spent two weeks between life and death.
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• irony
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• The march began. The dead stayed in the yard under the snow, like faithful guards assassinated, without burial.
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• simile
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• Men threw themselves on top of each other, stamping on each other, tearing at each other…Wild beasts of prey, with animal hatred in their eyes; an extraordinary vitality had seized them.
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• Metaphor
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• Never shall I forget those moments which murdered my God and my soul and turned my dreams to dust.
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• Personification
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• She [Madame Schachter] continued to scream, breathless, her voice broken by sobs. 'Jews, listen to me! I can see a fire! There are huge flames! It is a furnace!'
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• Foreshadowing
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• When and where was the author’s early boyhood spent?
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• He’s 13 in 1941• Sighet- little town in
Transylvania
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• What is a Kapo and how do they function within the camp and the novel?
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• A head prisoner, gains power • They keep the other prisoners
in line• They show the hierarchy of
power and the way anti-Semitism was institutionalized and exploited.
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• Describe Elie’s arrival at Auschwitz. Include selection.
• Double: who is this person? Angel of Death.
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• Men/women separated.• Stripped, decontaminated,
tattooed.• Dr. Mengele
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• Why was the Dutchman and the angel faced pipel hanged?
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• Stole during the raid • Hoarded weapons• Prepping for a resistance
movement
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• What part of his body does Elie describe himself as becoming while in the camp? Why is this significant?
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• A stomach• Dehumanizing• Why not a heart for example?
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• At what moment in the text does Elie lose his faith?
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• Jewish New Year.• States that he is stronger than
the Almighty.
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• What is Elie’s father’s inheritance to him?
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• A knife and spoon
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• Name two examples of irony in the text.
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• Beginning: Jews “help” needy but did not like them- foolish optimism of Jews & denial of facts
• Evacuation of Auschwitz• Auschwitz's motto “Work is
Liberty”
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• Name two characters in the text that experienced a physical death. Explain.
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• Zalman• Juliek
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• Name two characters in the text that experienced a spiritual death. Explain.
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• Meir Katz• Akiba Drumer• Elie• Madame Schachter
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• Name one instance of SILENCE in the novel and why it is significant.
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• Elie not crying out when his father is beaten by the kapo shows how he was forced to silence his morals in fear of abuse.
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• What is the significance of NIGHT in the book. Cite one example.
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• First night in Auschwitz. • Begins a time in Elie’s life
where he loses all meaning.
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• What facial feature does Wiesel continually describe. Why is this feature significant?
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• Eyes• Windows to the soul
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• What urge does Elie repeatedly say he is defined by? Name one instance in the text.
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• Hunger
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• In Auden’s “Refugee Blues,” natural references like a yew tree are used. Name another example and explain the significance of this creative choice.
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• Cats/Dogs• Fish• Birds
• Irony of humans being so advanced but so cruel.