Imagery Used In Night By Elie Wiesel

575 Words2 Pages

“What do you expect? That’s war…” Elie Wiesel, young teenage boy sent to work in a concentration camp with his family near the end of WW2. Author of his own autobiography, Night recounting his struggles during that time. This book is about a boy named Elie Wiesel who was captured by the Nazi’s and was put into a concentration camp, and got disconnected from God, and was very close to his mom, dad, and family. Throughout Night Elie Wiesel addresses the topic of genocide through the use of imagery, simile, and personification. Wiesel uses imagery to describe genocide. He witnessed a really traumatized hanging and he uses imagery to tell how he is really feeling. “That night the soup tasted of corpses” (Wiesel 62) Another way Wiesel uses imagery in night is when he describes the readers in chapter 4 how the man was very weak. …show more content…

The author was able to see the a man crawl across the floor very weak and hungry trying to find food. “A man appeared how two pots of soup where left unguarded, and one man’s hunger could not withstand the temptation. (Wiesel 56-57). Wiesel is trying to tell his readers that people went without food and water for days. Wiesel uses simile throughout the book to compare and the contrast. In the book wisel uses simile to compare and contrast characters and the concentration camps. This author is comparing Moshe the beetle’s tears to the wax. "They think I'm mad, he whispered, and tears, like drops of wax, flowed from his eyes." (Wiesel

Open Document