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Collection 5: "Anne Frank: The Book, the Life, the Afterlife" by Francine Prose

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  1. artless
    simple and natural; without cunning or deceit
    I understood, as I could not have as a child, how much art is required to give the impression of artlessness, how much control is necessary in order to seem natural, how almost nothing is more difficult for a writer than to find a narrative voice as fresh and unaffected as Anne Frank’s.
  2. proficiency
    the quality of having great facility and competence
    I appreciated, as I did not when I was a girl, her technical proficiency, the novelistic qualities of her diary, her ability to turn living people into characters, her observational powers, her eye for detail, her ear for dialogue and monologue, and the sense of pacing that guides her as she intersperses sections of reflection with dramatized scenes.
  3. intersperse
    place between or among
    I appreciated, as I did not when I was a girl, her technical proficiency, the novelistic qualities of her diary, her ability to turn living people into characters, her observational powers, her eye for detail, her ear for dialogue and monologue, and the sense of pacing that guides her as she intersperses sections of reflection with dramatized scenes.
  4. genocide
    systematic killing of a racial or cultural group
    I kept pausing to marvel at the fact that one of the greatest books about the Nazi genocide should have been written by a girl between the ages of thirteen and fifteen—not a demographic we commonly associate with literary genius.
  5. unassuming
    not arrogant
    What makes it even more impressive is that this deceptively unassuming book focuses on a particular moment and on specific people, and at the same time speaks, in ways that seem timeless and universal, about adolescence and family life.
  6. ineradicable
    not able to be destroyed or rooted out
    It tells the truth about certain human beings’ ineradicable desire to exterminate the largest possible number of other human beings, even as it celebrates the will to survive and the determination to maintain one’s decency and dignity under the most dehumanizing circumstances.
  7. dehumanize
    deprive of the positive qualities of a person
    It tells the truth about certain human beings’ ineradicable desire to exterminate the largest possible number of other human beings, even as it celebrates the will to survive and the determination to maintain one’s decency and dignity under the most dehumanizing circumstances.
  8. refuge
    a shelter from danger or hardship
    In April 1944, four months before the attic in which the Franks found refuge was raided by the Nazis, Anne Frank recorded her wish to become a writer.
  9. barbed
    capable of wounding
    In fact, though the Definitive Edition is almost a third longer than the first published version of The Diary of a Young Girl, the sections that were reinstated—barbed comments about Edith Frank and the Van Pelses, and other entries revealing the extent of Anne’s curiosity about sexuality and about her body—don’t substantially change our perception of her.
  10. incisive
    demonstrating ability to recognize or draw fine distinctions
    In an incisive 1989 New Yorker essay, “Not Even a Nice Girl,” Judith Thurman remarked on the skill with which Anne Frank constructed her narrative.
  11. precocious
    characterized by exceptionally early development
    A small number of critics and historians have called attention to Anne’s precocious literary talent.
  12. tangential
    of superficial relevance if any
    Her book has been discussed as eyewitness testimony, as a war document, as a Holocaust narrative or not, as a book written during the time of war that is only tangentially about the war, and as a springboard for conversations about racism and intolerance.
  13. emblematic
    being or serving as an illustration of a type
    “A child’s diary, even when she was so natural a writer, rarely could sustain literary criticism. Since this diary is emblematic of hundreds of thousands of murdered children, criticism is irrelevant. I myself have no qualifications except as a literary critic. One cannot write about Anne Frank’s Diary as if Shakespeare, or Philip Roth, is the subject.”
  14. impervious
    not admitting of passage or capable of being affected
    I do not mean to sound impervious to the poignancy of the Diary.
  15. poignancy
    a quality that arouses emotions, especially pity or sorrow
    I do not mean to sound impervious to the poignancy of the Diary.
  16. introspective
    given to examining own sensory and perceptual experiences
    Anne may have been a bright and admirably introspective girl, but there is not much in her diary that is emotionally demanding, and her reflections on the world have the quality of banality that one would expect from a 14-year-old.
  17. banal
    repeated too often; overfamiliar through overuse
    Anne may have been a bright and admirably introspective girl, but there is not much in her diary that is emotionally demanding, and her reflections on the world have the quality of banality that one would expect from a 14-year-old.
  18. transcend
    be superior or better than some standard
    Regardless of her age and her gender, she managed to create something that transcended what she herself called “the unbosomings of a thirteen-year-old” and that should be awarded its place among the great memoirs and spiritual confessions, as well as among the most significant records of the era in which she lived.
Created on Fri Jun 05 11:52:03 EDT 2020 (updated Mon Jun 08 11:37:49 EDT 2020)

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