Answer:Ritual perspective
Explanation:The ritual view of communication is a communications theory proposed by James W. Carey, in which he considers communications as constructed symbols that form our reality , this is how we share thing through maintaining order and solidarity and adapting to our environment and this is how we transform our society .
Carey defines ritual perpective as the way of interacting , engaging and relating to each other , people who share some common view will apply their ritual view to what they do.
Answer:
1) which
2) whose
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I hope that hlped. Have a good one!!
1. Analyze
2. Inference
3. Non fiction
4.text evidence
Answer:
B. (I can't see the whole answer, but that's my best choice. Next would be C.)
Explanation:
Themes can appear in stories, most news articles don't really have themes, and not all themes are specific to one story.
Charles Darwin's natural selection theory holds that "<em>only the fittest species will survive the competition for scarce resources"</em>. <em>At a time when Darwinism dominated evolutionary theory, Jack London lets it reflect as a major theme in his "The call of the Wild". </em>
The link between both pieces of writing is seen through the journey of transformation followed by the main character Buck, <em>a St. Bernard dog</em>, from being a domesticated pet, past his getting trafficked as a sled dog, and into becoming the fiercest pack leader.
Mid chapter III in the book, Buck finally opposes the original pack leader,<em> Spitz,</em> to death as London narrates <em>"It was inevitable that the clash for leadership should come. Buck wanted it. He wanted it because it was his nature"</em>. Spitz finally dead, Buck stands <em>"the successful champion, the dominant primordial beast who had made his kill and found it good."</em>
Current evolutionary theory counters Darwin's stating that <em>what determines survival is not superiority but rather the ability to adapt to surrounding conditions or survive dramatic change in the environment</em>.
In any case, I believe Buck is a great example of the drive for adaptation in a living creature, which doesn't necessarily imply progress but retrogression under unfortunate enough circumstances.