Who can write poetry after Auschwitz?

Teodoro Adorno, a German thinker, once said, "After Auschwitz, writing poetry was also barbaric." The tragedy of Nazi concentration camps is a deep blood trail that human history can never escape. Since the Second World War, many conscientious writers and filmmakers have projected their profound reflections on human civilization on the theme of the Nazi Holocaust, which has written a bloody chapter for the world's modern and contemporary literature and film history.

You got it? To put it simply, the brutal massacre of Auschwitz in Germany led to the collective anti-war trend of thought in the literary and art circles after World War II, which brought the cruelty of war to literary and artistic works. This is the expression of the artist's desire to pursue peace.