Wednesday, November 20, 2019

Today we are going to take notes on colons, write sentences with Ensued and Imperceptible, and move on to the next 10 pages of Night.  You have study questions below to answer on your blogs.


NIGHT STUDY GUIDE

THEMES:

1.     FAMILY: At the beginning of the book, prisoners in the concentration camps hold on to their family members. The most important thing is to stay with your family members as long as possible. However, as the book progresses, a major conflict in the book arise: self-preservation vs. love and loyalty to family.

2.     FAITH: Throughout the book, Elie presents the Jewish faith during a time of extreme darkness. The things Elie witnesses as a child cannot, in his mind, be reconciled alongside the idea of God. Throughout the book, he “loses his faith”. Is man stronger than God?

3.     DECEPTION: Especially self-deception – is a powerful force in Night. Self-deception has two primary results: boosting morale and hope, but also deluding the Jews and leaving them vulnerable.


IDENTITY: In the beginning of Night, Eliezer identity is that of an innocent child, a student of Talmud, and a devout Jew. But the concentration camps experience strips him (and his fellow Jewish prisoners) of his identity. Eliezer’s identity upon entering the concentration camp is that of a child, a student of Talmud. What is his identity when he leaves?


Night Study Questions (pages 3-22)

Detail everything you know about them (physical description, personality, etc.):

Moishe the Beadle: 

Elie:

Elie’s Father: 


SETTING:
Detail the time and place the story begins:

When does the story begin? 

What year is it at the end of Chapter One?

Where does Elie live? 


IN-TEXT QUESTIONS:
Infer the answer from the text (Minimum 1-2 sentences):

Describe where Moishe the Beadle is taken and what happens to him.

Describe the treatment Moishe the Beadle is given when he returns.

Describe the condition of the synagogue when the Hungarian police brings the Jewish Community there. 


LITERARY ELEMENTS:

ALLUSIONS:

The Destruction of the Temple: 

The Kabbalah:

The Week of Passover:

SIMILIES AND METAPHORS: GIVE FOUR EXAMPLES

IRONY: 

The celebrating of Passover in their current situation:


SHORT ANSWER QUESTION 
Minimum 4-5 Sentences

Why don’t the Jews listen to the warnings of the danger to come? What explains their ignorant optimism?

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