Who's Rudy? I need details.
Answer:
Bradbury in The Veldt presents a situation where a family has an intelligent house that has a particular room where the kids (Peter and Wendy) can think about different situations and the walls and the ceiling project those situations, making them more real (the noises and smell also reflect those situations).
This story describes how technology replaces humans in every aspect of their lives with the excuse of being "helpful". This parents are feeling useless because their house makes everything for them, they don't cook, they don't even shower themselves. However, what is more important is that this house replaced the role of parenting. Peter and Wendy feel loved by the house, but they don't feel loved by their parents: their mom and their dad are the ones who put "limits" and who tell them off.
Peter and Wendy's parents start worrying way too late. They were too comfortable to worry and the ending of the story represents it.
Explanation:
To complete this exercise, you have to <u>read The Veldt</u> by Ray Bradbury. Bradbury was a well-known writer from the United States who wrote mostly science fiction and dystopic novels and stories.
This story describes how technology ended up replacing everything in this family's lives and the consequences it brought.
Answer:
Ethics, because ethics is more thought than emotion and not as much as logic because who wrote it at the time wrote if for the people of the time, giving them guidance.
Answer:
aloneness
Explanation:
The poem “The Lady of Shalott” tells the story of the young isolated woman. The lady lives in the tower on the island that lies on the river flowing to Camelot. Lady knows she is bound by some curse, but she is not sure what it is nor what are the consequences. She looks on to the road to Camelot through the mirror, while weaving at all times.
<u>However, she becomes more isolated and lonely over time.</u> <u>In one line she says, 'I am half sick of shadows,' meaning she doesn’t want only to see the shadows of the people and their lives while being unable to live her life herself with other people.</u>
When she sees Sir Lancelot, she is overflown with the wish for the company and decides to stop weaving and leave the island. However, she dies before arriving at the shore of Camelot. <u>Her wish to meet other people and stop being alone brought down the said curse upon her. </u>