It seems that you have missed the necessary options for us to answer this question so I had to look for it. Anyway, here is the answer. According to "Introduction to Cultural Rebellion: Mid-Twentieth-Century Voices," what motivated both science fiction and beat generation authors in the United States after World War II is the <span>disillusionment with modern society. Hope this helps.</span>
They can investigate about the topic being persuaded about throughout multiple different sources, they can not act on a whim and be like hey that sounds cool lets do it.
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He newly appreciates it because he has gotten away from the feud, which was the opposite of "quiet and smooth and lovely." He also appreciates the freedom and liberation that comes with being on the raft with Jim.
Explanation:
no explanation but i hope that helps
The example that best describes it is the 1st one; since "dramatic irony" occurs when the audience (<em>readers</em>) understands what's going to happen, and knows about certain characters' actions, or event, and the characters are unaware of it; hence the characters actions go on a different way.
The tactic is used to make the audience more involved; thus it often creates this feeling of being powerless in the readers' mind, to do anything about it.
So the best statement is: "<em>The reader knows that the human neighbors plan to destroy Animal Farm</em>"
Answer:
They Traveled long distances through harsh conditions and some didn't even Get Gold
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