Try and look the answer up you can find something close
Answer:
The statement is false because Mr. M did not die in a car accident, rather he was killed by the mob outside the school.
Explanation:
The play "My Children! My Africa! by Harold Athol Lannigan Fugard is about Thami during the mid-1980s. The play focuses on the friendship of two young people, a black boy, and a white girl, and their efforts to make the world more equal.
In Act II scene iii, Thami came to the classroom to warn Mr. M not to organize the debate or take classes. But Mr. M refuses, ringing the bell at the end of each class. And despite Thami's advice and warning, Mr. M goes out to the unruly mob outside the school and gets killed.
Thus, the statement that Mr. M died in a car accident is false because he was killed by a mob outside the school and not in a car accident.
I'd say the answer is A. The only other logical answer would be B, but I wouldn't choose B since Socrates was for the republic. That doesn't get his point across very well.
It is true that in the epic fantasy tragedy genre, the
hero has several artistic superhuman magical qualities. This is needed to
depict a hero persona that conquers all the evil and whom characters
surrounding him could depend on his saving grace at the end of the day.