Much of the traditional Igbo life presented in this novel revolves around
structured gender roles. Essentially all of Igbo life is gendered, from
the crops that men and women grow, to characterization of crimes. In
Igbo culture, women are the weaker sex, but are also endowed with
qualities that make them worthy of worship, like the ability to bear
children. The dominant role for women is: first, to make a pure bride
for an honorable man, second, to be a submissive wife, and third, to
bear many children. The ideal man provides for his family materially and
has prowess on the battlefield. The protagonist in the novel is
extremely concerned with being hyper-masculine and devalues everything
feminine, leaving him rather unbalanced. Much of the gender theme in the
book centers around the idea of balance between masculine and feminine
forces – body and mind/soul, emotionality and rationality, mother and
father. If one is in imbalance, it makes the whole system <span>haywire.</span>
<span>Parallelism refers to using elements in sentences that are grammatically similar or identical in structure, sound, meaning, or meter. This technique adds symmetry, effectiveness and balance to the written piece. Some examples:You need to work quickly and decisively.
Like father, like son.</span><span>
She is sneaky and manipulative.
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The escaped criminal was wanted dead or alive.
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Hope this helps!
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Answer:
Hmmm, i dont rlly know what your asking. But third person is using he, she, they, they're, etc. It makes if difficult because (to me) sometimes it doesn't make a lot of sense and sometimes I have to keep looking back at who/what the characters are.
2. If every home in America replaced one incandescent light bulb... is the right answer.