How Does Elie Wiesel Use Stream Of Consciousness In Night

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Elie Wiesel’s personal narrative, Night, is a perturbing and candid autobiography that guides readers through the world of a boy living in the Concentration Camps. He uses dialogue, imagery, and his stream of consciousness to demonstrate what it was like to live through the Holocaust. The most poignant aspect Night is Weisel 's stream of consciousness throughout the story. Wiesel’s stream of consciousness transforms his view on faith as he witnesses the horrors of the Holocaust. At first he is astonished at the atrocities, but later he begins to believe he is living in a world without God. Upon his arrival at Birkenau, Wiesel cannot believe the horrors he was witnessing before his eyes, “How could it be possible for them to burn people, children, and for the world to keep silent? No, none of this could be true. It was a nightmare,” (Wiesel. 30). …show more content…

He recreated the images of destruction and showed the cruelty used against the victims of the Holocaust, “Without passion, without haste, they [the Nazi soldiers] slaughtered their prisoners. Each one had to go up to the hole and present his neck. Babies were thrown into the air and the machine gunners used them as targets,” (4). After reading his narrative, readers could not dispute the occurrence of the Holocaust, as no one could conjure up images of such horror and evil. He described their displacement in such a way that people couldn’t even imagine, only those who had experienced it could explain the internal reasoning of the victims. “Everything could be found there: suitcases, portfolios, briefcases, knives, plates, banknotes, papers, faded portraits. All those things that people had thought of taking with them, and which in the end they had left behind. They had lost all value.” How terrible could it have been for even photographs of loved ones to lose their

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