Answer and Explanation:
"The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle" was published in 1990 and features a girl from the high who rebels and participates in a very dangerous adventure in a ship.
Charlote represents the social role that was expected of women of the time, she was repressed to be fragile, naive, well behaved and modest, however, she finds herself in the midst of dangerous plots involving episodes of violence, death and fights. Charlott, then, represents a release from the social oppression that women were subjected to, when she participates in all these moments, being an essential character for the resolution of these conflicts. In other words, we can show that Charlotte was only able to show herself and be comfortable with her own existence when she broke the social standard expected for her. This reveals that women would only discover their true potentials once they rebelled against the repression they suffered.
Answer:
D. He puts Miranda to sleep with his magic so he can plan other
schemes.
Miller’s purpose to include this excerpt in the opening narrative was B. to compare the Salem Witch Trials with the political atmosphere of his time.
This introduction in the play signals a foreshadowing of what is going to happen as the events are recalled. However, Miller’s purpose throughout the play is to compare those historical events to what was happening at the time he wrote it. Arthur Miller sought to criticize Senator McCarthy’s prosecution of presumed communists US citizens by comparing it with the Salem Trials, in which innocent people were accused of witchcraft and later hanged.