Quoting, Paraphrasing, Summarizing Night and Maus - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 28
About This Presentation
Title:

Quoting, Paraphrasing, Summarizing Night and Maus

Description:

... of the terrible fate awaiting the Jews: the gas chambers and ovens at Auschwitz. ... fate awaiting the Jews: the gas chambers and ovens at Auschwitz. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:444
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 29
Provided by: D999
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Quoting, Paraphrasing, Summarizing Night and Maus


1
Quoting, Paraphrasing, Summarizing Night and Maus
  • Informal MLA Documentation

2
Quoting, P-Phrasing, Summing
  • Quoting
  • using another writers ideas and exact words
  • Paraphrasing
  • using your words and sentence structures to
    relate important ideas, events, arguments from
    another source
  • Summarizing
  • using your words and sentence structures to
    relate extended passages or chapters from another
    source (or even whole works)

3
One emotional scene in Night is when Wiesel
and the other Jews are on the train, on their way
to the concentration camp. After being separated
from her husband and two oldest sons, Madame
Schächter, a fellow prisoner, begins to go mad.
Wiesel writes, On the third night, while we
slept, some of us sitting one against the other
and some standing, a piercing cry split the
silence Fire! I can see a fire! I can see a
fire! (22). The other prisoners dont see fire,
but Madame Schächters vision is a dark omen of
the terrible fate awaiting the Jews the gas
chambers and ovens at Auschwitz.
4
One emotional scene in Night is when Wiesel
and the other Jews are on the train, on their way
to the concentration camp. After being separated
from her husband and two oldest sons, Madame
Schächter, a fellow prisoner, begins to go mad.
Wiesel writes, On the third night, while we
slept, some of us sitting one against the other
and some standing, a piercing cry split the
silence Fire! I can see a fire! I can see a
fire! (22). The other prisoners dont see fire,
but Madame Schächters vision is a dark omen of
the terrible fate awaiting the Jews the gas
chambers and ovens at Auschwitz.
5
One emotional scene in Night is when Wiesel
and the other Jews are on the train, on their way
to the concentration camp. After being separated
from her husband and two oldest sons, Madame
Schächter, a fellow prisoner, begins to go mad.
Wiesel writes, On the third night, while we
slept, some of us sitting one against the other
and some standing, a piercing cry split the
silence Fire! I can see a fire! I can see a
fire! (22). The other prisoners dont see fire,
but Madame Schächters vision is a dark omen of
the terrible fate awaiting the Jews the gas
chambers and ovens at Auschwitz.
6
One emotional scene in Night is when Wiesel
and the other Jews are on the train, on their way
to the concentration camp. After being separated
from her husband and two oldest sons, Madame
Schächter, a fellow prisoner, begins to go mad.
Wiesel writes, On the third night, while we
slept, some of us sitting one against the other
and some standing, a piercing cry split the
silence Fire! I can see a fire! I can see a
fire! (22). The other prisoners dont see fire,
but Madame Schächters vision is a dark omen of
the terrible fate awaiting the Jews the gas
chambers and ovens at Auschwitz.
7
One emotional scene in Night is when Wiesel
and the other Jews are on the train, on their way
to the concentration camp. After being separated
from her husband and two oldest sons, Madame
Schächter, a fellow prisoner, begins to go mad.
Wiesel writes, On the third night, while we
slept, some of us sitting one against the other
and some standing, a piercing cry split the
silence Fire! I can see a fire! I can see a
fire! (22). The other prisoners dont see fire,
but Madame Schächters vision is a dark omen of
the terrible fate awaiting the Jews the gas
chambers and ovens at Auschwitz.
8
One emotional scene in Night is when Wiesel
and the other Jews are on the train, on their way
to the concentration camp. After being separated
from her husband and two oldest sons, Madame
Schächter, a fellow prisoner, begins to go mad.
Wiesel writes, On the third night, while we
slept, some of us sitting one against the other
and some standing, a piercing cry split the
silence Fire! I can see a fire! I can see a
fire! (22). The other prisoners dont see fire,
but Madame Schächters vision is a dark omen of
the terrible fate awaiting the Jews the gas
chambers and ovens at Auschwitz.
9
Although he survived the concentration
campsperhaps the absolute worst expression of
racism in human historyVladek displays
racist attitudes himself. For example, when
Artie, Françoise, and Vladek return from the
grocery store and Françoise picks up a
hitch-hiker, Vladeks narrow-minded attitude is
quite obvious. As the hitch-hiker walks toward
the car, Vladek looks at him and yells to
Françoise, A hitch-hiker? Andoyits a colored
guy, a shvartser! Push quick on the gas! (98).
10
Although he survived the concentration
campsperhaps the absolute worst expression of
racism in human historyVladek displays
racist attitudes himself. For example, when
Artie, Françoise, and Vladek return from the
grocery store and Françoise picks up a
hitch-hiker, Vladeks narrow-minded attitude is
quite obvious. As the hitch-hiker walks toward
the car, Vladek looks at him and yells to
Françoise, A hitch-hiker? Andoyits a colored
guy, a shvartser! Push quick on the gas! (98).
11
Although he survived the concentration
campsperhaps the absolute worst expression of
racism in human historyVladek displays
racist attitudes himself. For example, when
Artie, Françoise, and Vladek return from the
grocery store and Françoise picks up a
hitch-hiker, Vladeks narrow-minded attitude is
quite obvious. As the hitch-hiker walks toward
the car, Vladek looks at him and yells to
Françoise, A hitch-hiker? Andoyits a colored
guy, a shvartser! Push quick on the gas! (98).
12
Although he survived the concentration
campsperhaps the absolute worst expression of
racism in human historyVladek displays
racist attitudes himself. For example, when
Artie, Françoise, and Vladek return from the
grocery store and Françoise picks up a
hitch-hiker, Vladeks narrow-minded attitude is
quite obvious. As the hitch-hiker walks toward
the car, Vladek looks at him and yells to
Françoise, A hitch-hiker? Andoyits a colored
guy, a shvartser! Push quick on the gas! (98).
13
Then, after they drop off the hitch-hiker, Vladek
questions Françoise What happened on you,
Françoise? You went crazy, or what?! He adds, I
had the whole time to watch out that this
shvartser doesnt steal us the groceries from the
back seat! (99). Artie and Françoise confront
Vladek, pointing out that, as Françoise puts it,
Vladek displays the same attitude toward
African-Americans that the Nazis displayed toward
the Jews (99).
14
Then, after they drop off the hitch-hiker, Vladek
questions Françoise What happened on you,
Françoise? You went crazy, or what?! He adds, I
had the whole time to watch out that this
shvartser doesnt steal us the groceries from the
back seat! (99). Artie and Françoise confront
Vladek, pointing out that, as Françoise puts it,
Vladek displays the same attitude toward
African-Americans that the Nazis displayed toward
the Jews (99).
15
Then, after they drop off the hitch-hiker, Vladek
questions Françoise. What happened on you,
Françoise? You went crazy, or what?! He adds, I
had the whole time to watch out that this
shvartser doesnt steal us the groceries from the
back seat! (99). Artie and Françoise confront
Vladek, pointing out that, as Françoise puts it,
Vladek displays the same attitude toward
African-Americans that the Nazis displayed toward
the Jews (99). WRONG
16
Then, after they drop off the hitch-hiker, Vladek
questions Françoise What happened on you,
Françoise? You went crazy, or what?! He adds, I
had the whole time to watch out that this
shvartser doesnt steal us the groceries from the
back seat! (99). Artie and Françoise confront
Vladek, pointing out that, as Françoise puts it,
Vladek displays the same attitude toward
African-Americans that the Nazis displayed toward
the Jews (99).
17
Then, after they drop off the hitch-hiker, Vladek
questions Françoise What happened on you,
Françoise? You went crazy, or what?! He adds, I
had the whole time to watch out that this
shvartser doesnt steal us the groceries from the
back seat! (99). Artie and Françoise confront
Vladek, pointing out that, as Françoise puts it,
Vladek displays the same attitude toward
African-Americans that the Nazis displayed toward
the Jews (99).
18
Then, after they drop off the hitch-hiker, Vladek
questions Françoise What happened on you,
Françoise? You went crazy, or what?! He adds, I
had the whole time to watch out that this
shvartser doesnt steal us the groceries from the
back seat! (99). Artie and Françoise confront
Vladek, pointing out that, as Françoise puts it,
Vladek displays the same attitude toward
African-Americans that the Nazis displayed toward
the Jews (99).
19
Then, after they drop off the hitch-hiker, Vladek
questions Françoise What happened on you,
Françoise? You went crazy, or what?! He adds, I
had the whole time to watch out that this
shvartser doesnt steal us the groceries from the
back seat! (99). Artie and Françoise confront
Vladek, pointing out that, as Françoise puts it,
Vladek displays the same attitude toward
African-Americans that the Nazis displayed toward
the Jews (99).
20
Then, after they drop off the hitch-hiker, Vladek
questions Françoise What happened on you,
Françoise? You went crazy, or what?! He adds, I
had the whole time to watch out that this
shvartser doesnt steal us the groceries from the
back seat! (99). Artie and Françoise confront
Vladek, pointing out that, as Françoise puts it,
Vladek displays the same attitude toward
African-Americans that the Nazis displayed toward
the Jews (99).
21
Then, after they drop off the hitch-hiker, Vladek
questions Françoise What happened on you,
Françoise? You went crazy, or what?! He adds, I
had the whole time to watch out that this
shvartser doesnt steal us the groceries from the
back seat! (99). Artie and Françoise confront
Vladek, pointing out that, as Françoise puts it,
Vladek displays the same attitude toward
African-Americans that the Nazis displayed toward
the Jews (99).
22
Of course, Vladek does not see the contradiction
in his thinking. Its not even to compare, he
huffs, the shvartsers and the jews! (99).
Immediately after, after theyve all agreed to
move on, Vladek has to have the last word. He
concludes, Only thank God that your shvartser
didnt take them (100). Vladek is too far gone,
so Artie and Françoise know theyll never change
his narrow-minded, racist attitude.
23
Of course, Vladek does not see the contradiction
in his thinking. Its not even to compare, he
huffs, the shvartsers and the jews! (99).
Immediately after, after theyve all agreed to
move on, Vladek has to have the last word. He
concludes, Only thank God that your shvartser
didnt take them (100). Vladek is too far gone,
so Artie and Françoise know theyll never change
his narrow-minded, racist attitude.
24
Of course, Vladek does not see the contradiction
in his thinking. Its not even to compare, he
huffs, the shvartsers and the jews! (99).
Immediately after, after theyve all agreed to
move on, Vladek has to have the last word. He
concludes, Only thank God that your shvartser
didnt take them (100). Vladek is too far gone,
so Artie and Françoise know theyll never change
his narrow-minded, racist attitude.
Why no period?
25
Of course, Vladek does not see the contradiction
in his thinking. Its not even to compare, he
huffs, the shvartsers and the jews! (99).
Immediately after, after theyve all agreed to
move on, Vladek has to have the last word. He
concludes, Only thank God that your shvartser
didnt take them (100). Vladek is too far gone,
so Artie and Françoise know theyll never change
his narrow-minded, racist attitude.
26
Of course, Vladek does not see the contradiction
in his thinking. Its not even to compare, he
huffs, the shvartsers and the jews! (99).
Immediately after, after theyve all agreed to
move on, Vladek has to have the last word. He
concludes, Only thank God that your shvartser
didnt take them (100). Vladek is too far gone,
so Artie and Françoise know theyll never change
his narrow-minded, racist attitude.
27
Of course, Vladek does not see the contradiction
in his thinking. Its not even to compare, he
huffs, the shvartsers and the jews! (99).
Immediately after, after theyve all agreed to
move on, Vladek has to have the last word. He
concludes, Only thank God that your shvartser
didnt take them (100). Vladek is too far gone,
so Artie and Françoise know theyll never change
his narrow-minded, racist attitude.
28
Of course, Vladek does not see the contradiction
in his thinking. Its not even to compare, he
huffs, the shvartsers and the jews! (99).
Immediately after, after theyve all agreed to
move on, Vladek has to have the last word. He
concludes, Only thank God that your shvartser
didnt take them (100). Vladek is too far gone,
so Artie and Françoise know theyll never change
his narrow-minded, racist attitude.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com