American authors <span>John James Audubon</span> and David Abram embraced nature and the individual in their works about frontier life. I think that you can use these two authord as their major works such as ''The Birds of America'' (1)and ''<span>Becoming Animal'' (2) include the issues connected to the environmental problems and individual perception of a person.</span>
In the 30s, the Japanese Empire was, in fact, in need of resources. Although throughout world war 2 we see that they have eyes on territory the most, their primary goal was actually to gain resources, as their islands have no natural resources, which narrows their options during development. China was on of their neighbors that they attacked, firstly at Manchuria, because it was a large area of the country that generated resources that were vital to the Japanese. They also attacked Korea and later the United States, as the U.S had placed a trade embargo on Japan.
The higher teaching is the doctrine of the Four Noble Truths and the Path, and this is the Buddhist doctrine of salvation. When a being decides to turn his aspirations in the direction of the Path, then his efforts culminate, not in heaven, but in a state which is outside the whole system of samsära.
White Southerners wanted the land, so the U.S. government granted it to them.
<span>C. The stories became a wedge of division between the North and South over the issue of slavery. </span>