She sees loneliness as a unique disease. Malady means disease. The other question you might ask is does she see it as curable at some point? The answer to that is very difficult and yet very simple.
Most authors when they write about social qualities around them, see the world (or the part they live in) gripped in and strangled by the problem they are writing about.
McCullers wrote the Heart is a Lonely Hunter in 1940 just before America's entry into WWII. America had just come out of a depression, the worst on record since America became a nation. There is good reason to believe that loneliness and isolation of people was a serious problem.
That feeling, up until Pearl Harbor, was reflected in America's Foreign Policy. Most people did not want to become involved. The term used was isolation.
There are open studies on the internet that show that marriages were in a decline for WWI to WWII and then spiked in the 1950 to the highest level in American history since these stats were tracked. I am recording this to show that McCullers thought that the hardships of life sometimes mold our attitudes towards others.
Answer:
B It was a key component in changing American segregation laws.
Explanation:
Duke Ellington was an American musician, pianist, and leader of a jazz orchestra. He led this group from 1923 until his death in 1974.
He performed in the era of Jim Crow racial segregation which led him to embraced the phrase "<u>beyond category</u>" as a liberating principle of his musical group.
Answer:
B.
Explanation:
I really don't know that's just my opinion
Situational irony is occurring as the character push the date of s.u.i.c.i.d.e to Valentine's day however due to their constant journey to finding purpose they keep pushing the date even further until the day they decide that they have way too much stuff to leave behind thereby quitting the idea of s.u.i.c.i.d.e.
Daedalus' own hurdle was his lack of strength to handle his unexceptional expertise when it comes to architecture and executing things correctly. He endangered his and his son's life in courtesy of his invented wings made of twine, feathers, and wax. In contempt of having doubts before he started their course, he still valued his ego and excitement over their safety that led to Icarus' death.
On the other hand, Icarus' own tests were his unbridled sentiments that naturally come out because he is a young man. When they were up in the air and the people on the ground we're staring at them with surprise, he started to be too gratified, too eager and too naive. All of these drove him to his own death after defying his father's advice to him previously.