<u>The correct answer is: A) to reveal the traumatic impact of the Holocaust had on his life .</u> The author tried to understand why so many deaths in the holocaust, what was the point of that factory of death, how to explain the insane mind that devised this black hole in history called Birkenau and then thought that perhaps there was nothing to understand and that the reason for the holocaust will always be incomprehensible.
Answer:
The correct answers are "magical realism" and "authorial reticence".
Explanation:
Magical realism is a style of fiction writing that takes aspects of the everyday world and adds magical elements as if they were ordinary. The concept of authorial reticence is related to magical realism, as it refers to the lack of an opinion about the accuracy and credibility of events such as the magical elements in a story. Therefore, the narrator accepting absurds as ordinary in "There’s a Man in the Habit of Hitting Me on the Head with an Umbrella" is known as magical realism or authorial reticence.
Answer:
judge danforth has staked his reputation as a representative of the law on the outcome of the salem witch trials. therefore, he cannot abide any result other than the condemnation of the accused. since the trials hinge on the girl's testimony (the word of abigail, betty and the others against the accused), he refuses to consider the possibility that they lied. one might even say that he is in denial; such a possibility would mean his end as a respected officer of the law. hale, on the other hand, as a man of god, cares more about the truth in absolute terms. he initially went along with the trials, but as his doubts grew he began to turn against them. he knows his reputation will suffer (or rather, it has already suffered) but, since he now believes the trials to be tainted, he fears for his soul because of his complicity in them. therefore, he is more open to the possibility that the girls lied, and argues forcefully to judge danforth against their testimony.
Explanation:
the answer is C
One year after Du Bois’s death, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 passed in the United States; it included many of the reforms that Du Bois had fought for during his nearly 100-year lifetime.