The correct answer is B) by igniting debate over the expansion over slavery.
<em>The Manifested Destiny deepened divisions among US citizens by igniting debate over the expansion over slavery.</em>
For one reason or the other, American citizens have been divided through US history. The debate over slavery was a difficult issue that could not be resolved after the Civil War and after the loss of so many lives. The government tried to manage the situation with the creation of acts such as the Missouri Compromise, but the differences between people in the South and the North were enormous regarding slavery. Slavery was an important part of the economy for the Confederated States. So the inevitable happened, an armed confrontation between the Union Army and the Confederated Army. So yes, the Manifested Destiny deepened divisions among US citizens by igniting debate over the expansion over slavery.
Romanticism was influenced by the enlightenment period which had classicism as its dominant art form. They were people who believed that classicism was too rigid and focused too much on scientific things and logic and being rational and wanted to speak more about mystic things and feelings and nature and supernatural and things like that, put more emotion and soul into writing.
Age of realism came as a response to this because they believed that romanticism was too melodramatic and depicted the world in a wrong way. They believed that people were being exploited by the society and the feudal lords or kings and that art should depict the world as it is in order to make people realize how bad things were. They believed romanticism artists were unaware of the troubles the people were going through.<span />
Radio
Telephone
Phonograph
Automobile
Television
<span>Assuming that this is referring to the same list of options that was posted before with this question, the correct response would be "both Egypt and Mesopotamia" that </span>placed valued writing, art, and fine workmanship, since these were some of the most innovative societies in human history.