This question is incomplete, here´s the complete question.
Based on 'Marat addressing the people', the painting by Louis-Leopold Boilly, describe the scene around him. Account for his great popularity.
What kinds of reactions would a painting like this produce among viewers in the Salon?
Answer:
In this painting, Jean-Paul Marat is shown speaking to a huge congregation of people.
His newspaper, L´Ami du Peuple (The friend of the
people), as many others at the time, spread the political philosophers´ ideas about liberty and justice, previously only attainable by educated people, among the common people. That´s why he was so popular and his speeches attracted massive groups of people.
Explanation:
The Salon was an official french art exhibition sponsored by the French government, destined to the nobility´s social gatherings, but also where critiques of the Ancien Régime and revolutionary ideas were discussed.
A painting depicting the massive spread of liberal ideas would have been upsetting for the nobility in favor of the Ancien Régime, and a hopeful call to those interested in revolutionary ideas.
I would say the answer is B. the end of the Cold War
Answer:
When President Teddy Roosevelt sent a naval squadron to Panama to help it win independence from Colombia, intervened in the Caribbean and Latin America numerous times, and thus expanded the Monroe Doctrine.
Explanation:
The Monroe Doctrine, introduced by former President James Monroe in 1823, is a foreign policy from the United States destinated to stop colonization and foreign intervention. It declares that if any political power coming from another continent intends to intervene in either North or South America, it would be seen as hostility towards the U.S.