She should see herself as a unique human being. We are what we are. Are genetics make us. Change the way you see the world. Why change how you look, when how you look is what makes you different. Its better to be the circle in a room full of squares.
The meeting between Gatsby and Daisy in the party was very awkward. It was too long ago since Gatsby saw Daisy, so he do not know how and what to act every time she's around.
Because of their difference in the status of life (Gatsby's poor and Daisy was rich), Gatsby still considered Daisy as old money (famous and rich). He was obsessed of winning Daisy back because he is falling her all over again, and that he knew that Daisy never loved Tom. His concern for Daisy is that, Daisy wants to have freedom, however she believed that Gatsby could not support their relationship their whole life.
At the party, Gatsby wants to impress her but Daisy was not impressed since the party was reflecting on the present day which she do not want to live in. She do not want to take responsibility in her whole life. Thus, the party that Gatsby thrown out was not valid.
Holden talks about subject of the sympathetic understanding that the adolescents need.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The novel "Catcher" was written by Holden Caulfield which made him really famous and helped him gain name and fame.
The subject of Holden was the sympathetic understanding of the adolescents with the problems that they go through in their stage of growing up into an adults and the changes that they see in life. The novel also talked about nerve in America which was involved in a cold war.
For the answer to the question above,
For century America the Civil War and westward expansion created numerous changes in society and politics. American artists turned to realism and regionalism to comment on the new concerns of the time period such as the ongoing struggle of the working class as well as the societal elevation of the middle class. Artists documented these national transformations by creating removed, impartial depictions of everyday life. In order to bring their characters and setting to life to allow their readers to become fully engulfed in their stories, Mark Twain in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and Kate Chopin in The Awakening employed regionalism while Henry James depicted real life in real time using realism in his story Daisy Miller: A Study.
Mark Twain and Kate Chopin were experts at creating regionalist works. Regionalism refers to texts that concentrate heavily on specific, unique features of a certain region including dialect, customs, tradition, topography, history, and characters. It focuses on the formal and the informal, analyzing the attitudes characters have towards one another and their community as a whole. The narrator is particularly important in regionalist fiction for he or she serves as a translator, making the region understandable for the reader. In his masterpiece The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain's use of regionalism brings the reader right into the heart of the 19th century wild American West. Twain brings to the local to life. From the very beginning of the novel Twain tells his reader, "In this book a number of dialects are used, to wit: the Missouri negro dialect, the extremist form of the backwoods South-Western dialects; the ordinary "Pike-Country" dialect; and four modified varieties of this last" (Twain, pg. 108). Twain guides his reader, using the vernacular, directly into the scene so you feel as if you are right next to Huck Finn, floating down the Mississippi River, as he dictates the story to you. Lack of grammar, incorrect sentence structure and words that you would never find in the English dictionary compose Huck's language and allow the reader to get a feel for his character as well as the customs of the specific region he comes from. The local color stories he describes throughout the novel give the reader a representation of the region in which he dwells and travels.
Answer:
ez all u have to is tell the similarities and differences
Explanation:
sim-ple