There are a lot of answers to this question depending on
the given choices to choose from. So next time please be kind enough to include
the choices. I can give you three possible answers for this question, now it
all depends on you to choose which one of these three are in the choices:
Select 1:
1. Readers are forced to consider the possible monstrous
actions inside of themselves, like hatred or prejudice.
2. The monster challenges readers to recognize that a
monster could be an ordinary person, not just an outcast.
3. Readers must consider that monsters live among them, maybe
in their own town.
We can actually see that the commonality in the three
choices tells us that the monster does not really refer to the monsters
depicted in fiction. However, monsters could be just ordinary person, it could
even perhaps refer to us. What makes us a monster is our personality, not our
appearance.
<span> </span>
The heading, address, message, salutation, closing, and signature.
Bodies everywhere and no one alive but me
Answer:
Transcendentalism have been demonstrated as a values based on self reliance, individuality, and optimism.
Explanation:
Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau were the person behind the transcendentalism, which was the philosophical movement that began in 1830s. We can find the transcendentalism in McCandless’s ‘Into the Wild’ where McCandless believes that life is best lived alone, in nature, by enjoying and feeling the natural beauty.
McCandless and Henry were both against materialism. They both believed that being dependent on the worldly possessions makes a person detached from their true self. McCandless wasn’t obsessed with any worldly possessions, he was ready to leave everything. Be it Emerson, or Henry, or McCandless, all of them tries to convey their readers to lead a simple life.