Lost Innocence: A Comparative Study of 'Speak' and 'Night'

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Scholarship In the novels “Speak” and “Night”, authors Laurie Halse Anderson and Elie Wiesel both focus on the tragedies two young people face during the prime of their adolescent years. The authors and their respective novels both convey similar topics; such as, anger, isolation, and resentment. The emotions felt by the protagonists in each book display a message of the aftermath and the irreversible effects a child can face when they are stripped of their adolescence and innocence. Anderson centers her novel around the humiliating experience of rape, while Wiesel reflects on his personal experience in Nazi concentration camp during the brunt of World War II. These two events cemented feelings of apathy and hostility towards humanity and society …show more content…

Wiesel is uprooted from his home and family at the young age of fifteen. The family is forcefully stripped of their belongings and privacy. This has a drastic effect on Wiesel’s mind, as he dropped into an environment that is beyond a child’s imagination and grasp. The loss of his family and freedom forces Wiesel into adulthood and must learn to deal with reality in a way that is inexplicable for someone his age. This descend into adulthood causes Wiesel to feel resentful towards humanity, which ultimately leads him to a mindset of hopelessness. Wiesel’s loss of his youthfulness causes him to become desensitized to everything in the world, and lose his vision of purity and innocence that once consumed him. The familiarity with death and suffering that Wiesel viewed forced him to mature at a rate that was out of his …show more content…

Anderson’s novel discusses the harsh aftermath of an unwelcomed event and the travesty it wreaks on a young girl’s life. The struggle Melinda faces when trying to rebuild and restore herself because of a loss of innocence in “Speak” is relative to Anderson’s message of the importance of purity in children. “Night” also supports a similar message by showing the tribulations and troubles a kid faces early on in life when he has no time to come into his own. Anderson and Wiesel both build their stories on the basis of pain and isolation to express their message of the importance of simplicity and ignorance throughout the course of a child’s adolescence. Both authors show how innocence and purity are things that irreplaceable and the permanent change a young child faces when they are not shedded of these things against their own

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