Salvador Dali's 1931 work, The Persistence of Memory is a surrealistic masterpiece.
Explanation:
Salvador Dali's 1931 work, The Persistence of Memory is a surrealistic work in that it derives heavily from the unconscious or the dreams of its maker.
Salvador Dali's seminal work features a poignant metaphor for the time he was making the work in.
The melting clock showcases the persistence of memory throughout time as if it is as fresh as the events it is relating and when it was formed.
It also shows the fluidity of time in the minds of the modern people who were growing up in a world where the transience of time was new reality and not the strict chronology of the past.
Answer:
It increased demand for shipping and railway transportation.
Explanation:
The Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956 was famously referred to as the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act. This Act was enacted by the 84th US Congress on the 29th of June, 1956 and signed into law by President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
The effect of the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956 include the following;
I. It was used to fund over 41,000 miles of interstate highways in the United States of America.
II. It enabled a faster means of transportation across the United States of America.
III. Freeways were significantly added to cities and as a result of this, it encouraged the growth of suburbs.
More americans were moving to live in the cities