<span>Henrik Ibsen used short, staccato-like sentences to represent realistic language in Hedda Gabler.
Ibsen was a Realist, which means that he tried to do everything in his power to make his texts portray the spirit of the era he lived in. One of the ways to do that is through speech that characters deliver in his works, as is the case in Hedda Gabler, one of his most famous works. </span>
<span>False. Mein Kampf (My
Struggles) was an autobiography written by Adolf Hitler that would later be a
bestseller. It was edited by Rudolf Hess
who was Hitler’s deputy. Hitler wrote
the book while imprisoned for an attempted coup in Munich. It summarizes his political ideology and his
vision of Germany. It was published in
two volumes with the first in 1925 and the second in 1926. Elements of anti-Semitism and genocide are in
the book as part of his plans for the reconstruction of Germany. It became very popular. When Hitler took
power, its popularity increased.</span>
Answer:
An oligarchy.
Explanation:
Oligarchy is a political concept that refers to minority rule, in which few people rule by having access to capital or inherited title. Informally, the term oligarchy can generally refer to a limited group with great power, often in a political system with or without formal democratic elements.
Oligarchs sometimes rule in formal democratic systems where dominant politicians constitute a small elite that recreates its parliamentary influence by controlling key economic resources and extensive personal networks. New democratic states are often used as examples of this, but there are also examples of oligarchy tendencies in established democratic political systems.