The Holocaust continued to exist as a black symbol in German history; more than 6 million people were killed through torture and government support for exclusion of men and women. Because of the collective tragedies of men and women, there is much debate about the sex - specific pain focus in Holocaust literature, so the explanation of the female writer 's Holocaust was largely ignored until the 1970' s. Many historians are still contesting the difference between men and women.
Like other Holocaust researchers, literary critics are slow to distinguish between women and men's experience and sentences. However, since the late 1980's, female scientists began analyzing the Holocaust literature based on gender. The earliest academic research on women and Holocaust literature tried to use literary works as a means of revealing more of the knowledge experienced by women during the Holocaust. Many novels and stories on the Holocaust are thin autobiographies, or literary works accurately reflect the state, concealment, concentration camps or resistance of Jews, literature often serves as an imaginative "testimony" . "For the Holocaust, researchers searched stories about the loss or ignorance of women under Nazism and tried to determine if women's experience is different or similar to male experience.
The Jews were persecuted in the concentration camps, tortured and massacred ("Holocaust" 1). The night of Elie Wiesel was a powerful memoir that I experienced during the Holocaust. The night represents the tragedy of the Holocaust using literary means such as the loss of faith, the cruelty to others, the night as a symbol of pain and fear, and the use of the first person stories. In the evening let the reader emotionally contact the Holocaust victims and encourage them
The Holocaust massacre has proven to be a catastrophic event in history. Details of this tragedy are reflected in Elie Wiesel 's "Night of the Night" book. During the Holocaust the night was placed in several concentration camps, but the most memorable one was the Auschwitz concentration camp. While Wessel was in the concentration camp, Wessel suffered from seeing his father dies. Therefore, psychological attacks are much worse than physical strikes. The world the people lived during the massacres during the Holocaust was explained by Jacques, Rochelle and Alexander Dona's memoirs, Jacques and Rochelstein in the personal experience of the Holocaust Kingdom. . . Both books explain the fear psychology of oppressors, especially Nazis suppression. Describing the malicious and cruel emotions, physical and psychological abuse of the Nazis for the victims