Dutch trading posts and plantations in the Americans precede the much wider known colonization activities of the dutch in Asia.
I would try D. Fourth option as an answer.
Look into OYEZ.org for possible answers.
Answer:
Colonial expansion inspired interest and generated writing during the age of the empire. Novels of exploration and exotic locales, such as Rider Haggard’s or Rudyard Kipling’s work, enjoyed great popularity. Even domestic tales were tinged by colonialism.
Explanation:
For example, Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park (1814) describes a family that owns plantations in Antigua. The madwoman in the attic in Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre (1847) is a woman from Jamaica. Colonialism figured heavily in the popular Western imagination and thus found its way into literature.
The Tutsis were being targeted. Tutsi, being smaller in number, felt elite, and rose to power as tribal leaders and the rich upper class. The Hutu always were more like farmers and workers in Rwandan society.