Details
Nothing to say, yet
Details
Nothing to say, yet
Comment
Nothing to say, yet
During the passage, we learned about two concentration camps - one from 1933 to 1945 and the other from 1941 to 1945. Over 40,000 people died in the first camp, mainly politicians and Jews. The second camp had 150,000 Jews sent there, and 33,000 people died. There's a dangerous city called Schoenberg and non-spaces like train stations where people freely shared information without judgment. The book also gives visual examples of these non-spaces. Today, forbidden knowledge is communicated through transportation and social media, and people can freely speak their minds in public areas. Concept four, Mühlendorf and on the train. During the passage in the reading, we learned about two concentration camps. The first one was that June 1933 to 1945. This concentration camp was mainly used for politician prisoners, Jews or anyone that seemed to be an enemy. More than 40,000 people died in this concentration camp. Then we have the Theresienstadt, sorry if I misspelled it, but this concentration camp was built and used from 1941 to 1945, which is located just 30 miles north from the Baton. Where more than 150,000 Jews were sent there and although people were not actually being killed there, this camp had 33,000 people die there. Then we have a little map that gives you a visual of the two concentration camps the city where Anna's hometown was, the train that shows you the passage from start to end. And here we can say that the center would be considered as a city named Schoenberg. This is a center that is still considered very dangerous and there's something called non-space, which would be considered as trains and train stations. These non-spaces are made to make people feel like they were not just in one place. This is a peripheral space where it would be considered as Anna's home village name. Now these non-spaces, although they are considered to be dangerous and forbidden from knowledge, there were no guarding, there were no stopping of taboo, all information was open and everyone had their own point of view and as they had their own point of view, they also shared information without judgment and they didn't have any regulations either so they were free to speak their mind. They had a diverse group of people coming together all in one. The non-spaces book, it gives us some sort of visuals of how they were seen. For example, there's passages, right, from page 115, they show that soldiers or firearms that make Jewish people had been killed, okay, so again, non-spaces, free to speak. On page 112, it is said that it was shown that refugees from East Persia had been given treatment from the hospital trains, so everyone working as one. And on page 76, it spoke about how a man sat next to Anna for the more attempts to get under her skirt. Then lastly, the forbidden knowledge now is present today, right, as transportation, people communicate there through public buses, trains, Ubers, social media, we can speak our mind in Instagram, Snapchat, Xthreads, public areas can be people getting together in restaurants, coffee shops, retail stores, malls, and so on.