The mood of the "Beat Generation" is best reflected in A. Jack Kerouac's <em>On the Road. </em><em />Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and Lucien Carr were "founders" of the Beat Generation, a literary and social movement following World War II during the onset of the Cold War. Many of their books dealt with the growing interconnectedness of the world, the nuclear threat of the Cold War (and the futility of the present), and resisting the conformity of the 1950s.
Colonial farmers grew a wide variety of crops depending on where they lived. Popular crops included wheat, corn, barley, oats, tobacco, and rice. The first settlers didn't own slaves, but, by the early 1700s, it was the slaves who worked the fields of large plantations.
<u>Answer:</u>
The traditional beliefs in some African communities are as evil powers, curse etc.
<u>Explanation:</u>
1. They belief that the disability is a curse for the people and people with the disabilities are hopeless.
2. They belief that the evil powers of witches or bad people will harm them for their needs.
3. They belief that their ancestors force them for the marriage and violence the society norms.
4. They belief that they receive a curse from the god.
Men looked at them a different way