The answer is a long way gone in the chapter 10. Since in chapter 10, Beah tells about the event which is positive in their memory and bring them emotional pain at the longing they produce. The story of musa disturbs the boys for a period and even leads Beah into contemplation about his grandmother but the fact that these pleasant circumstance are memory and not reality is not a lost in the boys.
Answer:
A farm or Ranch
Explanation:
You can tell because where it says barn. Barns are mostly found on ranches or farms since barns are used to keep livestock or livestock feed stored.
One cigarette, one puff is just 40,000 its self. almost more than half keep the body from functioning right . about 43 cause cancer, just in the US 400,000 per year from tobacco its self. the smoke also affect nonsmokers even smokeless .
To Stop the destruction of the earth's resourses
The sociology of culture and, the related, cultural sociology concerns the systematic analysis of culture, usually understood as the ensemble of symbolic codes used by a members of a society, as it is manifested in the society. For Georg Simmel, culture referred to "the cultivation of individuals through the agency of external forms which have been objectified in the course of history". Culture in the sociological field is analyzed as the ways of thinking and describing, the ways of acting, and the material objects that together shape a people's way of life.
Contemporary sociologists' approach to culture is often divided between a "sociology of culture" and "cultural sociology" - the terms are similar, though not interchangeable.[1] The sociology of culture is an older concept, and considers some topics and objects as more-or-less "cultural" than others. By way of contrast, Jeffrey C. Alexander introduced the term "cultural sociology," an approach that sees all, or most, social phenomena as inherently cultural at some level.[2] For instance, a leading proponent of the "strong program" in cultural sociology, Alexander argues: "To believe in the possibility of cultural sociology is to subscribe to the idea that every action, no matter how instrumental, reflexive, or coerced vis-a-vis its external environment, is embedded to some extent in a horizon of affect and meaning."[3] In terms of analysis, sociology of culture often attempts to explain some discretely cultural phenomena as a product of social processes, while cultural sociology sees culture as a component of explanations of social phenomena.[4] As opposed to the field of cultural studies, cultural sociology does not reduce all human matters to a problem of cultural encoding and decoding. For instance, Pierre Bourdieu's cultural sociology has a "clear recognition of the social and the economic as categories which are interlinked with, but not reducible to, the cultural."<span>[5]</span>