Formal , Contextual elements , Holocaust
The Holocaust was the period of the World War 11 which caused various negative effects on the involved countries and its people and especially the Jews. Different authors had to write and publish books that concerned the Holocaust. Among them was Simon Wiesenthal who wrote, "Sunflower" and Dora Aspan Sorell who is the author of the book "Tell the Children." The Sunflower is Simon's autobiographical account of what he went through during the time he was at the concentration camp in the Holocaust period.
The setting of the whole scene is done within the horrifying context as a camp laborer in the daily life. One day Wiesenthal is sent to Lemberg (the nearby town) to work with a work-party as a manual laborer at a makeshift military hospital which is situated at his previous technical school. Simon had graduated there as an Architect, but he had to return there as a Jewish prisoner which makes him recall the anti Semitic injustices he had gone through his occupation in German with the work of his Polish countrymen. He recognizes sunflowers planted on the graves of German soldiers on his way to the hospital (Wiesnthal 94).
[...] This displayed a condition of self-assurance and not creating a permanent solution. On the other hand, Dora Aspan Sorell's Tell the Children (Dora) is perceptive, poignant and informative autobiographic book. The book is a passionate story of a woman who manages to get through the obstacles that seem to fall in the route for her to recognize her dreams. Having been born in a small town in, Northern Transylvania, Dora Sorell finished her high school when the World War was about to begin. [...]
[...] Tell the Children: Letters to Miriam. Sighet Publishers, Inc Print. Miller, Gilbert. Ways In: Approaching to Reading in Writing about Literature and Film. New York: McGraw Hill Humanities Print . [...]
[...] Different authors had to write and publish books that concerned the Holocaust. Among them was Simon Wiesenthal who wrote, “Sunflower” and Dora Aspan Sorell who is the author of the book “Tell the Children.” The Sunflower is Simon's autobiographical account of what he went through during the time he was at the concentration camp in the Holocaust period. The setting of the whole scene is done within the horrifying context as a camp laborer in the daily life. One day Wiesenthal is sent to Lemberg (the nearby town) to work with a work-party as a manual laborer at a makeshift military hospital which is situated at his previous technical school. [...]
[...] The setting of the whole scene is done within the horrifying context as a camp laborer in the daily life. One day Wiesenthal is sent to Lemberg (the nearby town) to work with a work-party as a manual laborer at a makeshift military hospital which is situated at his previous technical school. Simon had graduated there as an Architect, but he had to return there as a Jewish prisoner which makes him recall the anti Semitic injustices he had gone through his occupation in German with the work of his Polish countrymen. [...]
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