The answer u are looking for is C. Assonance
Answer:
Police brutality and the numberless arrests of African Americans
Explanation:
The main theme of 'Poem resisting arrest' is police violence of African Americans.
Using the metaphor of the poem for African American people, Dargan explains the events and feelings that his people go through every day. With the lines such as <em>"It has the right to remain either bruised or silent"</em>, he uses what we know about police and the brutality to bring us closer to when African American person goes through facing the police officer. He – or in this case, the poem – knows he will be <em>guilty</em>, that he is <em>powerless</em>, so he is turning <em>numb </em>and slowly becomes <em>one of the many</em>.
<u>Dargan uses the poem and the metaphor to explain how African Americans resist arrest and police brutality.</u>
<u>At the core, he is using the poem and poetry as the means of the resistance without being found guilty. </u>
The answer is mostly likely B.
The figure of speech here is personification.
Personification is a figure of speech where human qualities are attributed to inanimate objects, animals or phenomena. In the sentence: "<span>Maria’s favorite song wrapped its arms around her and rocked her to sleep", the song is personified as having the human ability to comfort and embrace a person, and soothe them enough to "rock" them to sleep. </span>
Answer:
B. Denied any wrongdoing and tried to blame the motives of their critics
Explanation:
According to "Food Nation," manure gets into the meat at slaughterhouses because the stomachs and intestines of animals are not discarded correctly, and the knives of slaughterhouse workers are not cleaned often enough. As a result, after the E.coli epidemic 1992, inspectors would test each case of meat delivered to restaurants for the existence of pathogens.