The author writes about all the precautions Nancy takes before entering the hotzone. She puts on different layers of attire to keep her safe showing it is a hazardous place.
<em>dialog that subtly suggests communication conflicts</em> This is the correct option.
The charters in the story ,“Hills Like White Elephants”, talk about "it" all the time. The reader has to infer that what the man and the woman are talking about is an abortion. However, they seem to have difficulties to speak openly about it and they do not have it clear what they will decide. There are communication conflicts. The man thinks he knows what will be best for the woman but she does not sound so assertive. Their dialogue is fragmented. There is not a "history" line through it. The reader has to assume how it is they got together and she became pregnant. Yet, the couple are faced with a difficulty they find it hard to talk about.
These options are not right:
-characters who hide secret intentions from one another ( In this case, the woman is not hiding her pregnancy, for example. The man is not hiding his intentions , either. They cannot talk freely and openly about their problem: the woman 's pregnancy).
-imagery that highlights the importance of the setting. ( The imagery is used metaphorically to ,probably, represent the characters' emotions and moods).
-metaphors that reveal significant plot developments. ( Heminway tends to use simple language to get closer to the reader. Therefore, he will not oversuse sophisticated language).
The facts that are told at the end of the story are in sharp contrast to those that unleash the tragedy that Desiree and her son have to live. Only in the last few lines we discover that her husband knows the true cause of the dark color of the child's skin, which derives from the color of his own mother and has nothing to do with the unknown facts that cover the real origin of Desiree, since his filiation was not known from the beggining.
The irony is graphed in the fact that Desiree's husband could not have ignored that his mother was a dark-skinned woman, as he lived with her for the first eight years of his life and in addition to that, in the end, we also got to know that he was in possession of that letter that informed him the truth, in the probably event that he had forgotten it over the years.
The mistreatment he gave to his slaves was then the most important contradiction, although we can observe that his character softens after the birth of his son, even so having to see him daily was probably a permanent reminder of a shame he was trying to leave behind.
A hoax can be intended with multiple purposes. Although many times a hoax can be a joke, or for personal entertainment... At times, it can also be with the intention to send out a message, which can be considered a "social change".
For example, let's say hackers hack into international banking systems. Although it may be a hoax, and without the intention to actually steal/for personal entertainment. It could be with the intention to prove that international banking systems need to improve their security.
That creates a social change.
It starts making society realizes their strengths as well as their weaknesses. It makes them value what they have, and also make them think about what they can improve on.
Answer:
The reader will get a sense of wonder or fantasy from these kinds of locations.
Explanation:
Your average reader probably doesn't live at the bottom of the ocean, so this kind of setting can feel almost fantastical, which can be good for a utopian story, but not so great for dystopia. Many authors of dystopian stories want their readers to get a sense of "this is how <em>my</em> society could be" or to draw clear connections with the world they already experience.
It's easier for the average reader to make connections to their own life when the dystopian story takes place in a city or other setting that they have, in some way, experienced.