Night

Later in the memoir, Wiesel uses animal imagery to expose both the way the men and women in the concentration camps were treated and also the depths to which the men and women fell in order to survive. However, in the passage that begins “We stared at the

Later in the memoir, Wiesel uses animal imagery to expose both the way the men and women in the concentration camps were treated and also the depths to which the men and women fell in order to survive. However, in the passage that begins “We stared at the flames in the darkness,” he uses animal imagery to describe something else. What does he describe? What is the effect of the description?

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Night Later in the memoir, Wiesel uses animal imagery to expose both the way the men and women in the concentration camps were treated and also the depths to which the men and women fell in order to survive. However, in the passage that begins “We stared at the Later in the memoir, Wiesel uses animal imagery to expose both the way the men and women in the concentration camps were treated and also the depths to which the men and women fell in order to survive. However, in the passage that begins “We stared at the flames in the darkness,” he uses animal imagery to describe something else. What does he describe? What is the effect of the description?