tell me briefly about Anne Frank's life
Answers
Anne Frank's Family Goes into Hiding. In early July 1942, after Margot Frank received a letter ordering her to report to a work camp in Germany, Anne Frank's family went into hiding in an attic apartment behind Otto Frank's business, located at Prinsengracht 263 in Amsterdam.
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DEAR HUMAN BEING ,
THIS IS THE DETAILED ANSWER WRITEN POINT WISE AND DO MARK THIS AS THE BRAINLIEST :
Anne Frank –
1. The author of the diary, a young Dutch woman of German-Jewish origin
2. very intelligent and perceptive (observant), wants to become a writer.
3. In her diary she is precocious (talented), intelligent, charming, and, even
under the worst circumstances, funny.
4. grows from an innocent, tempestuous, precocious (talented), and somewhat petty teenage girl to an empathetic and sensitive thinker at age fifteen .
5. gifted a diary for her thirteenth birthday, immediately fills it with the details of her life: descriptions of her friends, boys who like her, and her classes at school .
6. finds comfort writing in her diary because she feels she has difficulty opening up to her friends and therefore has no true confidants.
7. also records her perceptions (opinions) of herself. She does not think she is pretty, but she is confident that her personality and other good traits make up for it.
8. comes across as playful and comical but with a serious side.
9. diary entries show from the outset that she is content and optimistic despite the threats and danger that her family faces
10. tone and substance of her writing change considerably while she is in hiding.
11. immensely gifted, both as a writer and as a person of great sensitivity.
12. remarkably outspoken and observant at the beginning of the diary, but as she leaves her normal childhood behind and enters the dire and unusual circumstances of the Holocaust, she becomes more introspective and thoughtful.
13. During her first year in the annexe, Anne struggles with the adults, who constantly criticize her behavior and consider her “exasperating.”
14. feels extremely lonely and in need of kindness and affection, which she feels her mother is incapable of providing.
15. During her time in the annexe, she suffers from boredom, despair, and the petty persecution of those around her.
16. Struggles with her inner self and considers what type of person she wants to become as she enters womanhood.
17. tries to understand her identity in the world of the annexe and attempts to understand the workings of the cruel world outside.
18. As she matures, Anne comes to long not for female companionship, but intimacy with a male counterpart. She becomes infatuated with Peter, the van Daan’s teenage son, and comes to consider him a close friend, confidant, and eventually an object of romantic desire.
19. In her final diary entries, Anne is particularly well-spoken about the changes she has undergone, her ambitions, and how her experience is changing her.
20. has a clear perspective of how she has matured during their time in the annex, from an insolent and obstinate girl to a more emotionally independent young woman .
21. Anne begins to think about her place in society as a woman, and her plans for overcoming the obstacles that have defeated the ambitions of women from previous generations, such as her mother .
22. Anne continues to struggle with how she can be a good person when there are so many obstacles in her world.
23. writes eloquently about her confusion over her identify, raising the question of whether she will consider herself Dutch, as she hears that the Dutch have become anti-Jewish.
24. Anne thinks philosophically about the nature of war and humanity and about her role as a young Jewish girl in a challenging world. From her diary, it is clear that she had the potential to become an engaging, challenging, and sophisticated writer.
25. After the annexe residents are discovered, she goes to the concentration camp at Belsen, in Germany, where she dies before her sixteenth birthday.