The principal of the college notified students that the course would be discontinued because of insufficient enrollment. (numerical details are acceptable.)
The council plans to impose an additional charge of 25p for every disposable cup sold in Mansfield to help cut down on paper waste.
These stories appeal to our primal side. They unleash our imagination and bring out a childlike sense of wonder. They let feelings surpass logic. They highlight the struggle with evil. They transport us beyond everyday safety. They trigger curiosity and exhilaration. They evoke adrenaline rushes. They lead us to envision the bleakest outcomes.
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.