Free Essay

Night

In:

Submitted By mary6969
Words 3849
Pages 16
Optimized Communications........................................................................................ 2 Optimized Security ........................................................................................................ 9 Optimized Expressions ................................................................................................ 9 Optimized Performance.............................................................................................. 13 Optimized for Your Family......................................................................................... 16

Quick Reference Guide
The AOL 9.0® Optimized Quick Reference Guide is designed to lead you through the new features of AOL 9.0Optimized so that you can quickly take advantage of the improved AOL experience. AOL 9.0 Optimized was designed from the ground up to give our members what they want the most. No matter how you connect to the AOL service— whether by dial-up or adding the AOL for Broadband service to a basic high-speed connection—our goal at AOL is provide you with an Internet experience that is safer, more secure, effortless and makes it fun to be online.

Optimized Communications
AOL 9.0 Optimized gives you new and easier ways to manage your e-mail. New Mailbox The AOL 9.0 Optimized mailbox has been given a facelift, and yet retains the familiar AOL Mail experience you have become accustomed to while using AOL. The mailbox is still accessible from the Read icon on the toolbar, the Read icon on the Welcome Screen, or AOL Keyword: Mailbox. When you first open your mailbox, you will be prompted to choose whether to automatically save a copy of all the mail you receive and send onto your computer. This will place these e-mail messages in a special folder, and allow you to access the messages from the Manage Mail tab (see below). As in earlier versions, the mailbox will open to show you a listing of your new mail. • • • To see a listing of older mail that you have received, click the Old mail tab. To see a listing of mail that you have sent, click the Sent mail tab. Each of these mail tabs has the new Quick Find feature. To use Quick Find: 1. Click in the input field next to the Quick Find label. 2. Start typing in any part of a screen name, e-mail address, or an e-mail subject that you are trying to find. 3. Notice that your mail list will narrow down to only those e-mail messages that match.

AOL 9.0 Optimized adds two new tabs to your mailbox, the Manage Mail tab and the Search Mail tab. These give you access to more powerful and advanced mail management tools. To see Recently Deleted Mail: 1. Click on the Manage Mail tab 2. From the My Mail Folders list, click on Recently Deleted. 3. The mail listing to the right will show mail you have deleted in the last 24 hours.

. Saved on My PC is the “local” storage of mail where you can save e-mail messages (automatically or manually) onto your PC. In earlier versions of AOL, this area was called the Personal Filing Cabinet (PFC). To save an e-mail message to the Saved on My PC folder: 1. From any mail listing, click once on an e-mail message to select it. 2. Click the Save button. 3. A menu will display, asking you to save the mail to AOL or to your PC. 4. Select Save to the Saved on My PC folder. An alternate way to save an e-mail message to the Saved on My PC folder is to use drag and drop: 1. Click and hold the mouse pointer over the e-mail message you wish Tip: In any mail list, you can select to move to a different folder. multiple e-mail messages by holding 2. Without releasing the mouse down the CTRL key and clicking with button, drag the mouse pointer your mouse on two, three, or more over to the Saved On My PC messages. Once these e-mails are folder name. selected, use the Save button or drag 3. When the Saved on My PC folder and drop to move the messages among is highlighted, release the mouseyour Saved on My PC folder. This multibutton. select can also come in handy when you are trying to delete multiple messages. Use the Saved on My PC folder to organize your saved mail by creating subfolders to hold various categories of mail. In order to create a sub-folder structure: 1. Click on the Saved on My PC folder, or any of the sub-folders 2. Click on the Setup Folders button 3. Select Create Folder 4. Enter a name for the new folder 5. The new folder will appear. 6. You can now add e-mail messages to the folder by either using the Save button, or the drag and drop method AOL 9.0 Optimized introduces a Saved On AOL® folder. This folder allows you to permanently save 20MB of mail on AOL’s servers, rather than on your local hard drive. This gives you the advantage of being able to read, forward or reply to these saved email messages as long as you’re an AOL member. To save an e-mail message to the Saved on My PC folder: 1. From any mail listing, click once on an e-mail message to select it. 2. Click the Save button. 3. A menu will display, asking you to save the mail to AOL or to your PC. 4. Select Save to the Saved on AOL folder. AOL 9.0 Optimized gives you 20MB of storage space per screenname, for a maximum of 140MB for each AOL account.

The new Search Mail tab allows you to find e-mail messages, located anywhere—on AOL® in the New, Old or Sent tabs, on AOL® in the Saved on AOL® folder, or on your PC in the Saved on My PC folder. To use the Search Mail: 1. Click on the Search tab. Tip: To search the contents of the 2. Choose the general criteria you are mail body of an email saved in your using to search on from the Search Mail Saved on My PC folder, click the drop down (Email Address & Subject, Search Options link and select the Email Address, or Subject) first option offered. 3. Enter what you are searching for in the input field. 4. Click Search. 5. A list of results will show in the mail listing area. On the search results listing, notice that there is a Location column. This column tells you in what folder the mail in question is currently residing. If you are using a 1024x768 or higher screen resolution, the new Quick Read pane allows you to quickly view mail and compose a reply with Quick Reply without actually opening the mail in a new window. To use the Quick Read pane to read and reply to mail (in Tip: Using a click and drag with your mouse, resolutions 1024x768 or above), select some text in the body of an incoming e1. Click the slide-out panel mail and then click the Reply or Quick Reply handle. button. Notice that the content of the incoming 2. Choose a mail in your mail message are now shown in your outgoing elist and double-click to select mail. it. 3. The mail will open in the Quick Read pane to the right. • To see the mail full size, either click the Full View button, or double-click on the mail again. 4. To reply, click the Quick Reply button. 5. Type your reply in the main entry field. 6. Click Send.

A useful, but slightly hidden feature of AOL mail is the context menus accessed via right mouse clicks. Point at an email message and click the right-mouse button. Note the many options such as read, delete, reply, reply all, forward and save to are all provided as choices. Right-clicks also work on folders, in the Read Mail window, in the Write Mail window. Give it a try to access some quick shortcuts. AOL 9.0 Optimized has many other mail options for members. Click the Mail Options to open the Address Book, the Download Manager, or Check Other E-mail using AOL Mail on the Web. You can also set your Mail Preferences or Settings. The Mail Settings allow you to change things like the default view of your mailbox, default sort order, default retention period of your mail, and other options.

New Advanced Spam Filters Spam is public enemy #1 at AOL, and AOL 9.0 Optimized gives you brand new state-of the art Spam Filters in order to keep Spam OUT of your mailbox. To access the new Spam Controls: • Click on the Spam Controls link on the mailbox • or go to AOL Keyword: spam controls • or go to AOL Keyword: mail controls

Your first lines of defense are the AOL® Advanced Spam Filters. These filters are so smart that they learn what you consider spam, adapt to it, and block future Spam from being delivered to your Mailbox. To use AOL’s Advanced Spam Filter: 1. Do nothing Tip: Like a human being, AOL’s new Spam filters take time to learn. Make sure to check your spam folder periodically to ensure your spam filters haven’t caught any mails incorrectly.

Yes, it is that easy. By keeping the check box for the Advanced Spam Filters checked, most spam addressed to you will be placed in your spam folder. However, AOL’s spam filters become much more useful for you if you train them. Training the spam filters is easy. To train the spam filters to catch more spam: 1. Click once on any spam mail that does still show up in your mailbox. 2. Click the Report Spam button. 3. The spam message will move into the Spam Folder. 4. Follow these steps for all Spam messages. You can also select multiple spam mails to report at one time. 5. AOL will now look for similar mail and place them in your Spam Folder. 6. Open your Spam Folder by clicking on the Spam Folder link on the mailbox. 7. Use the Delete or Delete All button to permanently delete all spam mail. 8. If AOL has caught any mails that you do not consider spam, highlight the mail and click This is Not Spam. 9. AOL will now look for similar mail and make sure to place them in your inbox.

In all cases, e-mail messages received from People you know – People in your Address Book and Buddy List® – will be delivered to your main mailbox. AOL suggests adding the e-mail addresses of all your friends and family to your AOL Address Book. If you want to add more stringent rules to block Spam, AOL 9.0 Optimized offers two other spam-fighting features. First, you can choose to block any mail with clickable hyperlinks or URLs from unknown senders. This way, if a spammer sends you a link, the mail will go into your Spam folder, but if someone you know (someone in your Buddy List or Address Book) sends you a link, it will be delivered to your mailbox. Second, you can use a Custom Word List to block e-mail messages with specific words in the subject line or body of the message. To use the Custom Word List: 1. Click the checkbox “Mail containing words on my Custom Word List.” 2. Select the Custom Word List link on the Spam Controls page. 3. The Custom Word List window will open. 4. Enter a word you wish to filter and click Add. 5. The word should appear in your list. 6. Add as many words as you like in the same manner. 7. When done, click Save. Again, if a spammer sends a mail with a custom word list word in it, the mail will go into your Spam folder, but if someone you know (someone in your Buddy List or Address Book) sends you a mail with the same word in it, the mail will be delivered to your mailbox.

AOL 9.0 Optimized offers additional Mail Controls in order to better control who you get mail from. These options, on the left side of the Spam controls window allow you to (among other things) block all mail, block mail from specific senders, or block mail with pictures and attachments.

Optimized Security
Built in protection for you and your family Anti-virus
AOL has introduced a new anti-virus service that provides an added level of security to your online experience. AOL 9.0 Optimized automatically scans every e-mail attachment you send or receive for viruses, worms and Trojan horses. This service is free and does not require you to upgrade or download any software -- AOL does it all for you. In addition, AOL offers members an easy-to-use anti-virus subscription service that is updated when you log on to AOL. This service protects your PC both online and offline by regularly scanning all potential virus sources -- including music downloads, digital pictures and multi-media downloads from Web sites, disks, CD-ROMS or DVDs. Check AOL Keyword: Virus Scan to learn more about it. McAfee Personal Firewall Express Having an unprotected broadband connection means that you are open to the Internet at large, giving hackers free reign over personal information on your computer. AOL has partnered with McAfee, a leading provider of firewall software, to bring you a free, easy-to-install personal firewall application. McAfee Personal Firewall Express keeps hackers from accessing your computer and allows you to digitally 'fingerprint' trusted applications. Every time your computer is probed or attacked, you get detailed reports and clear follow-up options. To download your free firewall, click the Safety button on the toolbar and select Firewall protection, then click Register to get started.

Optimized Expressions
AOL 9.0 Optimized lets you express the real you—like never before SuperBuddytm Icons
AOL® SuperBuddytm Icons are 3D animated characters that “express themselves” through more than 20 different animations and sound effects triggered by more than 150 of the most common chat phrases, abbreviated “text speak” and smileys that people use to send instant messages.

*Note: some characters are coming soon You can choose your own SuperBuddytm Icon from the self expressions set up page at KW: SuperBuddy. Choose from over 50 different icons and look for more to come in the future. Use SuperBuddytm Icons to enhance your abbreviated “text speak” on any instant message. Some of the most common expressions can be brought to life by your SuperBuddytm Icon.

You can find the most common “”text speak” as well as assistance with the SuperBuddytm Icon feature at KW:SuperBuddy.

Click on the item called "see what words or phrases" and you get a list of all the SuperBuddy Text Triggers.

Enhanced Instant Messaging
AOL 9.0 Optimized offers enhanced IM features that enable members to utilize IMs as a more complete communication tool. The addition of AOL® Talk, Instant Images and File Transfer are just a few of the enhanced features offered in AOL 9.0 Optimized. • AOL® Talk- Allows you to conduct real-time, one-to-one, voice conversations via instant messaging using a PC microphone or an Internet (USB) phone with other AOL® and AIM users.



Instant Images- Digital pictures can be shared with friends and family directly with this new feature.



File Transfer- Members can share any number of files directly with an AOL® or AOL® Instant MessengerTM (AIM) buddy without having to upload or download the file

AOL® has made it easy for you to use all the new enhanced IM features by placing icons right on your IM window that trigger any of the new features. Simply start an IM conversation with another member using AOL 9.0 Optimized and click the appropriate feature icon, watch the panel slide out to the right of your conversation and you are ready to start. You can find tutorials and information on all enhanced IM features at KW:Help or by chatting live with a member services representative also at KW: Help

Optimized Performance
AOL 9.0 Optimized enables a faster more efficient you by giving you more ways to customize your AOL, and new tools to keep your computer running at top performance.
AOL Settings AOL 9.0 Optimized puts you in powerful control of your Internet experience. To set your AOL Settings: 1. Click on the Settings button on the toolbar. 2. The settings window open, showing the Essential tab. 3. Select the area of AOL you wish to customize. 4. If you are unsure of where to find a setting, use the new search functionality to search for your options (coming soon!) 5. Click the A-Z tab for a complete listing of all the areas you can customize on AOL

One of the most popular new settings for AOL 9.0 Optimized is the Start-up Settings. The start-up settings allow you to configure AOL to launch your favorite URL or website when you sign on to AOL 9.0 Optimized. To set your Start-up Settings: 1. Click the Settings button on the toolbar. 2. Click on the Start-up Settings from the Essentials tab. 3. On the top part of this window, choose whether you wish to see the AOL Welcome Screen or the My AOL Quickview. 4. On the bottom part of this window, choose any AOL area (using its keyword) or an URL on the web to choose the destination you wish to launch when you connect to AOL. For your convenience, we have included Mailbox and Search, our two most popular destinations. Customize Your Toolbar AOL 9.0 Optimized allows you to further customize your AOL experience by offering you the ability to add your favorite places to the toolbar. The right side of the toolbar is set off from the rest of the toolbar in terms of its color and look and feel because it behaves differently than the other icons on the toolbar. This area, known as the Toolbar Carousel, allows you to place up to 18 favorite places for quick access. To learn how to add Favorite Places to your Carousel: 1. Use the scroll arrows to scroll to the end of the carousel 2. Click the customize button.

3. A screen will appear with step by step instructions and visuals on adding icons to your toolbar.

TopSpeedtm Technology
TopSpeedtm technology is web accelerator technology that speeds up the AOL® service by reducing Web page download times whether you are connected via dial-up or AOL® for Broadband. The technology is a free enhancement offered by AOL® to members on 9.0 Optimized. With AOL® TopSpeedtm technology members will find a noticeable difference in there Web downloads without having to change any settings on their computer or within the AOL® service. You can set your Top Speed settings by going to keyword: Settings then select Internet Settings

AOL® Computer Checkup
AOL Computer Checkup is a quick, private and free diagnostic tool that can detect and solve many common problems which may be affecting your AOL experience. If issues are detected, we can offer you up to three solutions: 1. Fix It For Me- AOL® has a library of auto fixes for some of the most common computer problems. 2. Tell Me How- AOL® can give background and possible steps that you can take in fixing the suspected problem. 3. Live Help- You can chat live with an AOL® Member Services representative about the diagnosed issue.

AOL® Computer Check-Up can be found at KW: Computer Check-Up. Or simply click on the Safety icon on your toolbar. At KW: Computer Check-Up click the “Check my Computer!” button and the diagnostic tool will automatically start running.* Once your machine has been checked, you will get a results page which will give you the option to take action on the issues that were found.
*By clicking Check My Computer! you give AOL® permission to examine your computer and retrieve information about your system.

Optimized for Your Family
AOL 9.0 Optimized allows you to create a unique experience for each family member.

Parental Controls
AOL®’s Parental Controls help you set limits on what your children can see and do while they are online. There are four Parental Controls categories: Kids Only (ages 12 & under), Young Teen (ages 13-15), Mature Teen (ages 16-17), and General (18+). Each basic age category has a different level of access to content and interactive features on AOL® and the rest of the Internet. Parental Controls let you specify whom your children can communicate with in e-mail, whether or not they can send and receive Instant Messages and what kinds of Web sites children can browse. You can also control how much time your children spend online with the Online Timer. Reminder: Because no filtering or blocking software is 100% foolproof, there is no substitute for over-the-shoulder parental supervision. With AOL 9.0 Optimized, we’re continuing to anticipate what our members want by introducing new features that will deliver more fun, smiles and surprises into AOL service and entertain everyone in the family. Please look for additional help at Keyword: Help

Any Master Screen Names on your account can review the Parental Controls settings for your child at any time. To review your child's Parental Controls settings: 1. Go to Keyword: Parental Controls. 2. Click on your child's screen name in the Edit Parental Controls section. Parental Controls settings are set for each screen name as it is created. When you create a new screen name at Keyword: Names, you will be required to select a Parental Controls category for that screen name. You can change the category or settings within each category at any time at Keyword: Parental Controls. To set Parental Controls for a new screen name that you have not yet created: 1. Go to Keyword: Parental Controls. 2. Click Create a New Screen Name. 3. Click Create a Screen Name. 4. At step 3 of the Create a Screen Name process, select the Parental Controls category (e.g., Kids Only, Young Teens) most appropriate to the user of the screen name you are creating. 5. Confirm the settings that are displayed. If you would like to modify the settings within a Parental Controls category further, click Customize Settings. You can change the Parental Controls settings at any time by following the directions below for an existing screen name. To set Parental Controls for an existing screen name:

1. Go to Keyword: Parental Controls. 2. Click Set Parental Controls. The Set Parental Controls screen appears. 3. Select the screen name whose category setting you would like to change. 4. Click a category button at the bottom of the window to modify the entire screen name's category setting.

With AOL 9.0 Optimized, we’re continuing to anticipate what our members want by introducing new features that will deliver more fun, smiles and surprises into AOL service and entertain everyone in the family. You can find help for all these features plus more at Keyword: Help. For more information on AOL 9.0 Optimized, please visit Keyword: AOL 9.0 Optimized.

Similar Documents

Free Essay

Night

...‘Survival of the Fittest’ is defined as the continued existence of organisms that are best adapted to their environment with the extinction of others (Wikipedia: Survival of the Fittest). In Night by Elie Wiesel, in face of extermination the Jews of Sighet commit uncharacteristic ‘sins’. Fear had forced silence, fear had forced evil deeds and fear had turned the Jews against one another. The cruelties of natural selection is described in Night by Elie Wiesel, portraying the breaking of the human spirit, damaging faith in humanity, family, and God. Humanity, an important theme in Elie Wiesel’s memoire is portrayed as an ever changing proposition. The Jews of Sighet, and most importantly Elie, is seen struggling with his conscious based on the inhumane acts of oppression he has witnessed. In the beginning his faith is abundant and is evident through his trust in the German’s and disbelief in Moshie the Beadle (his mentor). “He told me what had happened to him and his companions. …The Jews were ordered to get off and onto waiting trucks. The trucks headed toward a forest. ...Infants were tossed into the air and used as targets for the machine guns” (Wiesel 6). Although, Elie did not believe Moshie at first the nightmares described by his mentor became a reality when he had first entered the concentration camps. The traumatizing events witnessed by Elie had caused him to question his faith in the human race while stripping him of reason to live. It was hard for him (Elie) to...

Words: 1022 - Pages: 5

Free Essay

Night Market

...One of the most interesting places in Malaysia is the night market. You may visit and experience the night market yourselves. Both locals and foreigners agree that the night market is the most common feature in the local society. The night market begins when the vendors arrive in the late afternoon. More and more goods laden vans arrive to begin a brisk day of business. Most of the vendors busily set out to set up their stalls respectively in order to get ready for a brisk day of business. The sun gradually sets and the night market picks up momentum. More cars and vans are arriving. By now, the stalls are neatly and strategically arranged to entice their customers. There is an assortment of goods sold ranging from food, toys and clothes, to name a few. A variety of goods is sold at low prices. Large rainbow-coloured parasols are used to shade the people from rain and shine. A concoction of blaring music can be heard in the night market background amidst the constant shouting. It is an amazing kaleidoscope of sights, sounds, smells and colours. The night market is known as a haven by local ‘gourmets’ who can enjoy various kinds of mouth-watering local cuisine. Still more people arrive, they come from all walks of life, mingling freely and harmoniously. Crowds are walking up and down in an endless stream. Some of them are stopping by the stalls and haggling before making purchases. Little children tag along, amused and excited. Sprinklings of tourists join in to experience...

Words: 364 - Pages: 2

Premium Essay

Night By Elie Wiesel

...Night by Elie Wiesel is a novel of post-Holocaust literature. It is a story about a Jewish man and his family and of the unspeakable horrors that they endured during World War II. Night is a retelling of a terrible story, everything that leads to Wiesel and his family entering Auschwitz, the most notorious death camp to this day, and the aftermath of liberation. Night is an incredibly well written novel. It twines together the power of fear and the loss of faith. It touches on how humanity changes in the face of power and oppression. This novel is able to not only testify, but discuss the atrocities of events that are not easily spoken about. Wiesel manages to takes many difficult subjects like murder, religion, and false hope and force people...

Words: 1624 - Pages: 7

Premium Essay

Commentary On Night By Elie Wiesel

...The book I read for this assignment is Night by Elie Wiesel. Night is a memoir about Wiesel's horrific experiences at the German concentration camps Auschwitz and Buchenwald. In Night, there are two main conflicts. We see Wiesel struggle with his faith in god and his faith in humanity itself. In the beginning of the book, we get to see a bit of Elie's life. Elie is a 13-year-old Jewish boy living in Sighet, Transylvania. "By day I studied Talmud and by night I would run to the synagogue to weep over the destruction of the temple" (20). Elie finds a mentor in Moshe the Beadle, a poor Hungarian immigrant that possesses a deep understanding of Jewish mysticism. Moshe and Elie pray together. Moshe the Beadle also helps Elie with his studies in...

Words: 1572 - Pages: 7

Premium Essay

Elie Wiesel's Night Analysis

...Night by Elie Wiesel, recounts his experiences during the holocaust. Wiesel and his family were Jews living in Nazi Germany. He and his family were taken from their home in 1944 to the Auschwitz concentration camp. Elie was fifteen when he was imprisoned and his goal was to keep his family together. When the Germans separated Elie and his father from his mother and sister, he then focused on staying by his father’s side. As he and his father were being transported to Buna Werke, a concentration, the fear of being separated from his father was great, “all I [Elie] could think of was not to lose him [Elie’s father],” (Wiesel 30). Realizing that he would never see his mother and sister again, the idea of being alone without his father terrified him. Elie’s devotion to his father gave him a reason to...

Words: 670 - Pages: 3

Premium Essay

Heroism In Elie Wiesel's Night

...This iconic symbol is ingrained into the minds of toddlers all over the world, and it continues to capture the awe of movie-goers today. While this may be entertaining and certainly enjoyable, it breeds a false idea about what being heroic means. Heroes do not always have supernatural powers; they may not even aspire to fight evil. A hero is someone who faces the worst of what life has to offer but takes a chance – a brief moment of courage. Whether in realistic tragedies, comical science fiction, or in supernatural TV thrillers, heroes are just ordinary people who go out on a limb to do what is right. Elie Wiesel was only fifteen when he was taken to Auschwitz, one of the most horrific concentration camps of the Holocaust. In his memoir, Night, he tells of the dark and sadistic mistreatment of the Jews imprisoned in the camp. Among endless other tales of heroism, one man, who is not even named in the book, shows courage in a simple way that makes a huge impact on Wiesel. When they first arrive at the camp, this unnamed man secretly advises Wiesel and his father to lie about...

Words: 641 - Pages: 3

Premium Essay

Analysis Of Night By Elie Wiesel

...Night by Elie Wiesel is an autobiography about his experience of being forced to survive in a concentration camp. At the tender age of 15, Elie had to witness and suffer through things we could never imagine. As a Jew, one could only choose to die or work until they were too sick to function. Some people were unlucky enough to not get a choice to begin with. Unknowingly, this nightmare would change him externally and internally for life. Due to the atrocities witnessed and experienced during the Holocaust, Elie Wiesel, a once deeply religious individual, loses his faith in God, himself, and mankind. Throughout the story there were many occasions of where Elie started to question and lose his faith in God. One of the many occurances...

Words: 804 - Pages: 4

Premium Essay

Symbolism In Elie Wiesel's Night

...be like if you knew that at any second of your day you could die? Elie Wiesel, a first-hand witness of the Holocaust, wrote a book called Night about how he lost his faith while suffering in harsh conditions at Auschwitz. The book illustrates the memories he has of what happened at the camps, his faith journey that turned into a complete rollercoaster, and how he was close to death through it all. In the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, he uses the symbols of smoke, fire, and the skull with crossbones to foreshadow death or pain. In the book, the smoke represents death throughout the whole book. On page 6, it states: The train disappeared over the horizon; all that was left was thick, dirty smoke. This represents death because as the Jews are being crammed into tight cattle cars, they...

Words: 572 - Pages: 3

Premium Essay

Night By Elie Wiesel Analysis

...Have you ever wondered how different your life might be if you were deported to a concentration camp, but managed to escape and survive? In the book Night by Elie Wiesel, Elie and his family were deported to a concentration camp. Elie eventually lost his mother, father, and sisters, and struggled to survive throughout the book. After going through many horrible things, he was freed when American tanks came to the concentration camp Elie was at. Elie had been affected by many events in the book, such as the loss of his humanity, the harsh conditions in the camps, and the loss of his father. One event that clearly changed him was the loss of his humanity. In short, he lost everything that made Elie himself, such as his clothes and even his own name. For example, Elie said “A Kapo came in to check if somebody had new shoes… I had new shoes. But, as they were covered in mud, they weren’t noticed. I thanked God for creating mud” (Page 38). It is very evident that Elie did not want to lose his shoes, because the Germans had already taken everything he owned that made Elie unique. Another example can be found just a few pages later. Elie notes “I became A-7713. From then on, I had no other name” (Page 42). He was no longer identified as a living human being with a name, but...

Words: 721 - Pages: 3

Premium Essay

Starry Night

...Starry Night Analysis Date of Creation: 1889 Height (cm): 73.70 Length (cm): 92.10 Medium: Oil Support: Canvas Subject: Landscapes Characteristics: Post-impressionism Framed: Yes Art Movement: Post-Impressionism Created by: Vincent van Gogh Current Location: New York, New York Owner: Museum of Modern Art Starry Night Analysis Page's Content  Composition  Use of color  Use of Light  Mood, Tone and Emotion  Brushstroke Starry Night Composition Top  Starry Night  Vincent van Gogh The night sky depicted by van Gogh in the Starry Night painting is brimming with whirling clouds, shining stars, and a bright crescent moon. The setting is one that viewers can relate to and van Gogh´s swirling sky directs the viewer´s eye around the painting, with spacing between the stars and the curving contours creating a dot-to-dot effect. These internal elements ensure fluidity and such contours were important for the artist even though they were becoming less significant for other Impressionists. Thus Starry Night´s composition was distinct from the Impressionist technique of the 19thcentury. The artist was aware that his Starry Night composition was somewhat surreal and stylized and in a letter to his brother he even referred to "exaggerations in terms of composition. " The vivid style chosen by van Gogh was unusual - he chose lines to portray this night scene when silhouettes would have been a more obvious choice. In Starry Night contoured forms are...

Words: 943 - Pages: 4

Free Essay

Starry Night

...insanity, instability, and his pure obsession with the art he created, but the first time I saw Starry Night, I was overcome with an immense feeling of calmness and serenity that completely took me by surprise. Van Gogh’s Starry Night was one of the many works painted during his time in the Saint-Remy Asylum in 1889 and is now one of the most recognizable and desirable works of art in the world. Starry Night now resides in The Museum of Modern Art it New York, New York where it is admired and appreciated by thousands of people daily. I honestly don’t know the true definition of my feelings towards the painting. I only know that it stands out to me more so than any of his other works. When I see Starry Night, I see the dark sky that Van Gogh saw; and not only the darkness, but the exact opposite as well. I see the extreme brightness and color that he emphasizes throughout the night sky. He portrays the colors of the night with such brilliance and I am irrevocably drawn to that. Van Gogh gives the wind, literal and unmistakable movement that is impossible to interpret in any other way. The stars are oversized and shine brighter than our current reality, but I would assume it was to emphasize their brightness, and it’s a possibility that Van Gogh had a much better view of the stars than we do now and lived without our mass amounts of modern light pollution. The color blue in Starry Night is what I, and what I would assume many other people would be initially drawn to. It is the dominant...

Words: 571 - Pages: 3

Free Essay

Night Sky

...I couldn't imagine growing up anywhere else other than a farm. I miss the gurgling sounds of irrigation houses as they watered the fields and the cool blanket it would produce over the farm on a hot summer night. Or playing in the dense sticky mud with my brothers and sister acting like we were stuck in quick sand, helpless to escape. However, nothing compares to the night sky on a clear evening. It would make any star gazer green with envy with its vivid scenery, wild life in the background and fresh brisk air. Once the coral and amethyst sky transforms into a vast amplitude of jet black the real joy began. A colossal umbrella of luminous stars would metamorphasized amongst the ocean of darkness. Every star and planet would be in its' proper place every night. A full moon would seemed to lighten the night, projecting invisible rays that would high light the mountains on the horizon. The stars would glitter and gleam, blinking wildly aginst the contrasting black night. Constellations were emense and easy to spot. The North star always shined brighter than the others making it effortless to find the Big Dipper.Some of my favorite memories are attached with the starry sky. Wildlife would invigorate the evening with its harmonious tunes. Frogs would start croaking and bellowing as the stars started to gleam. Crickets could be heard performing their orchestra of chirps and whistles for the man on moon. An occasional hoot from an underground owl would echo aginst concrete ditches...

Words: 441 - Pages: 2

Premium Essay

Twelfth Night

...Twelfth Night is a magnificent comedy written by famous writer William Shakespeare. Twelfth Night or What you will was probably written for performance on the Twelfth Night i.e. the last night of the Christmas holiday ,January 6th in the year 1601.it is also likely that it was first presented before queen Elizabeth I in a great hall of her palace of Whitchali ,just outside London. the play would suit such an occasion since it’s a delightful ,lighthearted comedy ,full of love and laughter ,and with only a cloud or two to pass across the happy sunshine. But what about the social background of the play? For many centuries Christian communities have celebrated the feast of Epiphany-the time when the infant Jesus was first presented to the Magi (wise men) twelve days after his birth on Christmas day .in Shakespeare’s time; this whole period from 25th December to 6th January was given over to ‘Yuletide revels’-a time of feasting and celebration which probably dates back to Roman Satumalin. During this extended partying, it was traditional to play tricks on people, and it was understood that, for a while the usual master-servant relationship were turned on their heads. Twelfth Night was a period of carnival in which typically: a. People might give away to bodily pleasures of all kinds (drinking too much, indulging in sex, over eating and many more). b. Language itself seemed to run riot (with jokes, nonsense and wit). c. The traditional hierarchies (the lord and lady ‘at the top’...

Words: 1525 - Pages: 7

Premium Essay

Twelfth Night

...Pick two characters in ‘Twelfth Night’ and analyse their role and what they might represent from what you have read so far. Use the text and any research you have done to help explain your opinions. Despite not being a main character, Feste has a significant role in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night. It can be argued he is less of a character and more of a function as he takes on a choric, commentary role rather than a participatory one throughout the play. Feste’s position as an ‘allowed fool’ gives him the ability to speak his own inscrutable form of wisdom, and therefore allows him to point out truths that other characters don’t want to hear. He tells Olivia that her brother’s soul is in heaven and therefore beyond mourning, thereby urging her...

Words: 781 - Pages: 4

Premium Essay

Twelth Night

...English Essay Task Characters often play a crucial role in constructing meaning in plays; How have characters been developed in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night? Shakespeare is world-renowned for his aptitude in writing plays, for a wide range of audiences, and one of these plays is Twelfth Night. In this play, Shakespeare takes particular care in the development of his characters in order to construct the meanings and messages embedded in Twelfth Night. Through the development of some key, central characters within the play, namely Olivia and Malvolio, Shakespeare showcases the chaos and hardship instigated by their pride, and is then able to reinforce the importance of order and adhering to the set, established, hierarchy of Elizabethan times. Shakespeare first portrays the character of Olivia as vain, superficially judgemental, and indulging in her own self-pity, neglecting her duties as the lady of the house. A secondary character, Malvolio, is depicted by Shakespeare to be overambitious and full of his own self-importance – attempting to overstep his position. Shakespeare manifests different forms of pride in different characters in order to show that whatever the facet of pride the character might possess, in the end, their fatal flaw will still result in chaos and misfortune, thereby emphasising the need of adhering to and attending to the duties of their positions so that order can be maintained. Through Olivia’s language and interactions with other characters, Shakespeare...

Words: 1577 - Pages: 7