Answer: The Mesopotamians believed that these pyramid temples connected heaven and earth. In fact, the ziggurat at Babylon was known as Etemenankia or "House of the Platform between Heaven and Earth". An example of an extensive and massive ziggurat is the Marduk ziggurat, of Etemenanki, of ancient Babylon.
Explanation:
Answer:
For the excercise: While "Kitsch" refers to works that realistically depict easily identifiable objects and events in a pretentiously vulgar, awkward, sentimental, and often obscene manner, the purpose of "propaganda" is to persuade us to believe a specific message rather than have an artistic experience. 1.-Kitsch and 2.- Propaganda are the correct answers in the presented order.
Explanation:
To understand this answer we have to remember the concepts shortly and then analyze why they meant it. So in the first place, as described in the exercise "Kitsch" is an art style that is created in a very raw and unpolished regular format instead of giving it the polished high art style we are used to observing in the artwork. It is a dark humoristic art style and its main purpose is to make fun of some things by being ironic and clinic. On the other hand, Propaganda is much more a different kind of production. First of all, it is not considered an art category but it is considered a source of media use to sensitize, create awareness, and persuade the public about a certain topic, make it adopt the propaganda's posture and create empathy or supportive behavior.
Answer:
The correct answer is Obliteration
Explanation:
Obliteration means eradication, erasure.
Something that is obliterated means that it is gone.
In sociology, the word obliteration can take many connotations, one of them being cultural obliteration.
Cultural obliteration usually occurs when a person moves to a country that has a cultural context that they are not used to but end up adapting said culture. What happens with their original cultural identity is known as Obliteration. It can also happen when a person adopts their partners' cultural identity while sacrificing their own.
In this particular case, Keiko grew in Japan and Wahid in Egypt.
They got married in the United States and they decided to stay there and "become American" rather than negotiate the differences between their two cultures. This scenario exemplifies obliteration.