Elie Wiesel's Night and Tadeusz Borowski's This Way For The Gas Ladies and Gentlemen are first-hand accounts of the Shoah that helped create the field and genre of Holocaust literature
1. Elie Wiesel's Night and Tadeusz Borowski's This Way For The Gas Ladies and Gentlemen are first-hand accounts of the Shoah that helped create the field and genre of Holocaust literature. There are numerous similarities and differences in their works.
Compare and contrast these two works in terms of their 'elements' of narrative:
'Plot',
Characterization,
Language style,
Choice of first or third person narration,
Description – physical and/or psychic, 'elements' of narrative you choose.
AND
Explain how, using these elements, these writers realized their mission of 'telling the world.'
Using quotes when relevant!!!
_______________________
Rosenfeld, Alvin Confronting the Holocaust : the impact of Elie Wiesel
Spargo, R. Clifton After Representation? : The Holocaust, Literature, and Culture.
Friedlander, Albert H. Out of the whirlwind : a reader of Holocaust literature
Alexander, Edward The resonance of dust : essays on holocaust literature and Jewish fate
Young, James Edward Writing and re-writing the Holocaust essays on the nature of Holocaust literature and its critical interpretation
Kremer, S. Lillian, Witness through the imagination : Ozick, Elman, Cohen, Potok, Singer, Epstein, Bellow, Steiner, Wallant, Malamud : Jewish-American Holocaust literature
Friedman, Saul S Holocaust literature : a handbook of critical, historical, and literary writings
Adams, Jenn Representing perpetrators in Holocaust literature and film
Ezrahi, Sidra DeKoven By words alone : the Holocaust in literature
Braham, Randolph L. Reflections of the Holocaust in art and literature
Ezrahi, Sidra DeKoven The Holocaust in literature a comparative study of modes of literary response to the Holocaust
Goldwasser, Lee Literature of the Holocaust An Analyss
Reiter, Andrea Ilse Maria Narrating the Holocaust
Leak, Andrew N. The Holocaust and the text : speaking the unspeakable
Rogasky, Barbara Smoke and ashes : the story of the Holocaust
Levine, Michael G The belated witness : literature, testimony, and the question of Holocaust survival
Langer, Lawrence L. The holocaust and the literary imagination
Compare and contrast these two works in terms of their 'elements' of narrative:
'Plot',
Characterization,
Language style,
Choice of first or third person narration,
Description – physical and/or psychic, 'elements' of narrative you choose.
AND
Explain how, using these elements, these writers realized their mission of 'telling the world.'
Using quotes when relevant!!!
AT LEAST 20 SOURCES required - Chicago STYLE OF REFERENCING IS ATTACHED ALSO!!!
_______________________
Rosenfeld, Alvin Confronting the Holocaust : the impact of Elie Wiesel
Spargo, R. Clifton After Representation? : The Holocaust, Literature, and Culture.
Friedlander, Albert H. Out of the whirlwind : a reader of Holocaust literature
Alexander, Edward The resonance of dust : essays on holocaust literature and Jewish fate
Young, James Edward Writing and re-writing the Holocaust essays on the nature of Holocaust literature and its critical interpretation
Kremer, S. Lillian, Witness through the imagination : Ozick, Elman, Cohen, Potok, Singer, Epstein, Bellow, Steiner, Wallant, Malamud : Jewish-American Holocaust literature
Friedman, Saul S Holocaust literature : a handbook of critical, historical, and literary writings
Adams, Jenn Representing perpetrators in Holocaust literature and film
Ezrahi, Sidra DeKoven By words alone : the Holocaust in literature
Braham, Randolph L. Reflections of the Holocaust in art and literature
Ezrahi, Sidra DeKoven The Holocaust in literature a comparative study of modes of literary response to the Holocaust
Goldwasser, Lee Literature of the Holocaust An Analyss
Reiter, Andrea Ilse Maria Narrating the Holocaust
Leak, Andrew N. The Holocaust and the text : speaking the unspeakable
Rogasky, Barbara Smoke and ashes : the story of the Holocaust
Levine, Michael G The belated witness : literature, testimony, and the question of Holocaust survival
Langer, Lawrence L. The holocaust and the literary imagination
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