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Bumek [7]
4 years ago
7

One critic called wiesel "part conscience...and part warning signal." how is that appropriate?

English
1 answer:
irinina [24]4 years ago
5 0
The truth for this is that Wiesel is like a conscience,reminding people of the evil of persecuting others. Also he acts as a warning signal because he is cautioning others to be on guard against intol<span>erance.It is then more than fitting to call wiesel part conscience and part warning signal. </span>
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Explanation: another answer to the question

He is not a reliable narrator because he is insane. Though he repeatedly states that he is sane, the reader suspects otherwise from his bizarre reasoning, behavior, and speech. ‘‘True—nervous—very, very dreadfully nervous I had been and am; but why will you say that I am mad?'' The reader realizes through Poe’s description of the narrator’s extreme nervousness that the protagonist has in fact descended into madness, as anxiety is a common symptom of insanity. He apparently suffers from some form of paranoia. Besides, the narrator claims that he loves the old man and has no motive for the murder other than his growing dislike of a cloudy film over one of the old man’s eyes. At first the intervals receive conventional description—an ‘‘hour,’’ or ‘‘many minutes’’—but eventually such descriptions become meaningless and duration can be presented only in terms of the experience itself. Thus, in the conclusion of the story, the ringing in the madman’s ears is ‘‘distinct,’’ then is discovered to be so ‘‘definite’’, and finally grows to such obsessive proportions that it drives the criminal into an emotional and physical frenzy. Throughout the story, not much objective information is given; the experience is simply way subjective.

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