Answer: In "Harrison Bergeson" the goverment created a society where everyone was made exactly equal by torturous and inhumane devices. They warped the idea that "all men are created equal" by changing it from "all men are equally important to the world no matter what the circumstance" to "all men are literally equal in every way, no matter what we have to do to make it that way." I do not agree with this interperatation because it does not help the society in any way to have everyone exactly equal in all things. Instead of created a solid base of fairness, it creates a crumbling foundation. With everyone being average intelligence, new ideas were most likely scarce and illogical, entertainment was probably bland, boring, and meaningless. This interperataion created a community that was more unequal than it started with and flawed in many ways.
Answer and Explanation:
In Amy Tan's short story "Rules of the Game", the conflict is mainly external, man vs. man or, more specifically, daughter vs. mother. Waverly and her mother seem incapable of understanding each other's feelings and demonstrations of such feelings. That is made very clear toward the end of the story, when the mother proudly introduces Waverly to every one, even strangers, on the street. Waverly is a sort of child prodigy, a chess genius, and her mother can't help but display her. Waverly, however, does not enjoy being exhibited, reacting in a way that is disrespectful and offensive, in her mother's opinion.
Technically it is true that Frederick Scott Archer introduced the concept of combining artificial and natural light in the studio, but it should be noted that this concept had been used before, just without much fame.