3. INTERPRETATION OF ANNE FRANK AND
THE SURVIVOR OTTO FRANK
• Anne Frank wrote several diaries during the two years she
spent hidden in the Secret Annex. It is also important to
analyze in detail his father, Otto Frank. He was the only
member of the Frank family to survive the Nazi concentration
camps of World War II.
• Her notes not only describe life in the secret rooms where her
family and four other people hid from the Nazis, but also reveal
how such a young girl interpreted everything that was
happening around her and the very evolution of her perception.
of life under those conditions.
4. ANNE´S DEATH REASON
• At the beginning of November 1944, Ana is deported to the Bergen-Belsen
concentration camp, along with her sister.
• The two here, unfortunately, come down with typhoid fever.
• He did not know of the existence of the diary until one of the people who
helped them hide gave it to him in July 1945. Two years later, Otto managed
to publish the diary. He titled it “Het Achterhuis”, “The Secret Annex”, in
Spanish.
5. ¿WHO WAS ANNE FRANK?
• Annelies Marie Frank, known in Spanish as Anne Frank, was a German girl of
Jewish descent known worldwide thanks to the Diary of Anne Frank, the
edition of her private diary where she recorded the almost two and a half
years she spent hiding with her family. and four more people from the Nazis.
• Born: June 12, 1929, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
• Died: 1945, Bergen-Belsen, Germany
• Burial Place: Bergen-Belsen, Germany
• Parents: Otto Heinrich Frank, Edith Frank
• Siblings: Margot Frank
6. Horror literature
Is a genre of literary fiction that is intended to or has the
ability to frighten, cause fear, or terrify its readers or
viewers into inducing feelings of horror and terror.
7. The horror genre has ancient
origins with roots in folklore
and religious traditions,
focusing on death, the
afterlife, evil, the demonic,
and the principle of incarnation
in person. These manifested
themselves in stories of beings
such as witches, vampires,
werewolves, and ghosts.
8. Is probably one of the best known horror
writers in history. Creator of the detective
story, his tales are already a classic of world
literature that no matter how much we read
again and again, continue to give the same
terror from the first reading to the last.
Edgar Allan Poe
10. Shirley Jackson
Specializing in the horror genre, this
American novelist was both popular during
her lifetime and after her death,
receiving widespread critical attention
for her brilliant short stories and
novels. Six novels and over a hundred
short stories among many other books
classified in the Gothic stream still make
millions of readers shudder when they
discover her.
11. Henry James
Is another of the best horror writers. Author
and literary critic known for his novels and
stories based on the technique of point of view.
This method allows him a thorough psychological
analysis of the characters from the inside,
resulting in true wonders.
12. Mystery literature
WHAT IS IT?
Mystery literature, or mystery novel, is a genre of literature typically
focused on the investigation of a crime.
The term mystery novel is often used as a synonym for detective novel or
crime novel, that is, a novel or story in which a detective (professional or
amateur) investigates and solves a criminal mystery. Sometimes mystery
books are about crimes that actually happened.
13. Mystery novels" can be detective
stories in which the emphasis is on the
case or suspense element and its
logical solution. In addition to
mystery novels, there are detective
stories with a strong element of action
and realism in the confrontation and
murder scenes.
Mystery literature can encompass a
mystery of a supernatural or
suspenseful nature in which the
solution need not be logical, and there
may not even be a crime to be solved.
This type was common in the mystery
magazines of the 1930s and 1940s, with
titles such as Great Mystery, Mystery
Suspense, and Special Mystery being
described at the time as supernatural
horror stories with "strange menaces".
14. The mystery novel genre is a recent form of literature that has
developed over the last 2 centuries. During the English
Renaissance era literacy increased, and as people read more,
more individualistic thinking increased as well.
One possible cause for the lack of popularity of this genre
before 1800 is the lack of police agencies. After the industrial
revolution, many cities would have sheriffs or night watchmen
at best. Naturally, the policeman would be aware of every
individual in the city, and crimes would either be solved
quickly or not solved at all. As people began to settle in cities,
police forces became institutionalized, and detectives were
increasingly needed, and thus the mystery novel emerged.
BEGINNING OF THE GENRE
15. One of the first mystery novels was E. T. A. Hoffmann's
Mademoiselle de Scuderi in 1819, which served as
inspiration for Edgar Allan Poe's 1841 Crimes of the Rue
Morgue, as well as Zadig ou la Destinée written in 1747
by the philosopher Voltaire. Wilkie Collins' novels, The
Lady in White and The Moonstone, are considered two of
the masterpieces of this literary genre. In 1887, the
writer Arthur Conan Doyle created the character Sherlock
Holmes, whose mysteries are mainly responsible for the
great popularity of this genre.
The genre began to expand around the turn of the century
with the development of the dime novel and the pulp
format. Books were very helpful to the genre, with many
authors writing novels of this genre in the 1920s. An
important contribution to the mystery genre in those
years was the development of the juvenile mystery by
Edward Stratemeyer, who developed the character Nancy
Drew.
16. The 1920s also brought one of the leading
mystery authors of all time Agatha
Christie, whose work includes the books
[(novel)|Murder on the Orient Express]] of
1934, Death on the Nile of 1937 and the
world's best-selling mystery novel, the
best-selling Ten Little Indians in 1939.
The mass popularity of the Pulp style in
the 1930s and 1940s increased interest in
mystery literature. Pulp magazines declined
in popularity in the 1950s with the advent
of television.
17. One of the contemporary mystery
authors is Stephen King and he
shares similarities in his works with
those of Edgar Allan Poe. Poe is
one of the fathers of the
contemporary horror and mystery
genre, he has had a great influence
on King's stories.
18. CLASSIFICATIONS
Fiction novels are divided into different
species, such as suspense genre, procedural
police, hard boiled, among others. Dashiell
Hammett's The Maltese Falcon, for example,
falls into the hard boiled category.