Answer:
What widely accepted archetype of the late 1800s does this text challenge? the man as a ruler.
It's called that because it was one of the first streets in New York City to be lit with electric lights. People continue to use this term today because the millions of lights on the theatre marquees still brighten up the night sky in a flashing white.
The story "A White Heron" by Sarah Orne Jewett, the author provided the local color of the rural side of Maine. Local color refers to the author's use of language and manners distinct to a particular region or a group of people. Local color was made popular during the literary movement of <em>realism</em> - a literary style dedicated to representing familiar things as they are.