Responses:
Elie Wiesel aims to prevent history from recurring, wishes to share the traumatic experiences he endured, enables readers to relate Wiesel's story to current global issues, and firmly believes we ought to remember the events of the Holocaust.
The bond between literature and the Holocaust is intricate. It is important to acknowledge that this combination is indeed significant—the Holocaust has shaped, and in many cases, defined the works of almost every Jewish author after it, such as Saul Bellow and Jonathan Safran Foer, along with various non-Jewish writers like W.G. Sebald and Jorge Semprun. However, when examining literature as an art form—a discipline inherently focused on representation and interpretation—it appears to conflict with the unchangeable nature of the Holocaust and our profound responsibilities towards its remembrance. Great literature demands creativity, reshapes narratives, navigates moral complexities, and alters factual realities. In the context of the Holocaust, such an approach can feel utterly wrong and even sacrilegious, as the atrocities witnessed at Auschwitz and Buchenwald require no literary enhancement.
Subjective explanations stem from or are shaped by individual experiences, beliefs, and thoughts.
I merely copied and pasted this to check if others had provided an answer; one individual claimed B and that response received 5 stars along with several thanks, so I would go with B. Additionally, B appears to be more objective as it's influenced by the person's feelings about the character.
One example of figurative language is personification. Typically, poems incorporate this and definitely onomatopoeia.
The concept vocabulary enhances the reader's comprehension of Whitman's naturalistic
perspective, which highlights the richness
and splendor
of nature and existence.Whitman's naturalistic poetry underscores the idea that nature provides sufficient resources for all, advocating that not every individual needs to be harmoniously united.
This prosperity offered by nature should allow for a peaceful life, which is the sentiment Whitman aimed to convey to his audience.
This is evident in the poem "On the Beach at Night Alone," where lines such as:
- "vast similarity interlocks all"
- and "This vast similarity has always connected them" reflect these themes.
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