Analysis Of Sophie's Choice By William Styron

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“God must’ve been on leave during the Holocaust,” (“Simon Weisenthal”).
To assume that the lack of divine protection fueled the Holocaust is a popular rationalization, one that allows a person to remain blind to the truth of the massacre. William Styron delves into the true, unadulterated root of the tragedy in Sophie’s Choice, a grueling tale of a Holocaust survivor and her astounding impact on the lives of the people around her. Stingo, an aspiring writer, is intrigued by the beautiful but beaten Sophie. Her dark past of internment both alarms and captivates him, like a horrific car accident that one cannot look away from, and leaves him with a grim realization from which he can never recover. Stingo’s experience mimics Styron’s own, as …show more content…

She is abused, enslaved, and tortured, and she is unable to rebound from her losses. There is no rationalization for the torment that she endures; it is due solely due to the inherent evil that prevails inside all of humanity. No one is exempt. The world can try to make excuses, but Styron’s message is clear: inborn and immense capacity for evil lies at the core of humanity. The Holocaust shows the zenith of this diabolism. It was this monstrosity that proved to Styron the extreme extent to which humans are implicitly cruel. Such savagery is tangible in everything enacted by mankind. Today’s society is still plagued by unescapable evil, though the sins of humanity are often not as apparent as the Holocaust. Terrorism, murder, robbery: all heinous examples of the evil that has been beleaguering mankind since the dawn of time, and that will continue to do so for all of eternity. It is an ugly truth, but this malevolence is not contained only in Sophie’s Choice; it is a condemnation that humanity cannot run from. Despite humans’ best attempts to deny it, the horrible realization that humans are innately vile is

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