LITERATURE
There are various ways through which Elie Wiesel has effectively used his literature work based on real-life events, Night, to communicate with his audience. This is one of the ways through which Wiesel has managed to not only communicate with his audience, but also connect with them, especially, due to the fact that most people across the world have a negative perception towards the Holocaust. One o0f the ways through which Elis Wiesel achieved this was through the use of premonition, as a writing style.
One of the ways through which Elis Wiesel has achieved this, for example, is through the use of music, whereby, Juliek plays a music fragments by Beethoven, a German music composer, right before and during the Gleiwitz killings. Considering the fact that he plays sad songs right before the deaths and the beginning of the Holocaust, this is one of the ways through which Elis Wiesel prepares his audience and Night readers for the sad outcome, characterized by deaths (Wiesel, 1982, p. 66).
In his book, however, Elis Wiesel has not suggested any rationale behind the Holocaust. At the same time, as much as he introduces and prepares the audience of the book to the holocaust, particularly focusing on Gleiwitz, he has not speculated the motives of the perpetrators (Wiesel, 1982, p. 100). However, one of the aspects that draw the audience’s attention from this trilogy third of the work is the fact that towards the fall of 1942, Wiesel reports that the Hungarian government was seeking to expel every Jewish resident that wasn’t in a position to prove their citizenship as Hungarian citizens (Wiesel, 1982, p. 122). This is main motive that the perpetrators used, in order to conduct the holocaust.
References
Wiesel, E. 1982. Night. New Jersey: Prentice Hall.