Answer:
I don't agree with Jean Louise.
I don't believe she has changed.
Atticus means that Jean Louise's disappointment is his fault.
Explanation:
Jean Louise's statement shown in the question above shows her disappointment with the community that she lived with for so many years and who participated in her creation in an intense way. She does not believe that the society that seemed good and just was able to be extremely prejudiced and racist allowing not only black people to pay for crimes they did not commit, but for judging and discriminating against those who tried to do something to change that. In the end, she realizes that she created an illusion about this society, so the society is not wrong, but who is wrong is she.
I do not agree with Jean's positioning because the sense of justice she feels and the discontent with the community stem from a creation she received from her father, which managed to show her what is correct and fair for all people.
Because of this education and guidance and also for letting her get involved in the case he was advocating, JEan's father, Atticus feels guilty about his daughter's sadness and is very sorry that he did not put her in that feeling.
Answer:
Walking in the rain is fun when you are sad.
Explanation:
Answer:
by
Explanation:
The correct way to say this would be: I go to school by 9am.
Answer:
A). They emphasize the idea that male writers did not face obstacles that women did at the time.
Explanation:
The underlined sentences 'stresses the idea that male writers did not face obstacles' which is the central idea of 'A Room of One's Own.' Virginia Woolf is one of the most acknowledged and well-known feminist writers. It <u>discusses the subordinate place of women in the history of literature. She says that women have been treated like teenagers and their works have not been expressed or acknowledged adequately</u>. The only human whose work is expressed completely is Shakespeare(representative of all male writers) implying that male writers do not face the similar interruption or obstacles as of women. Thus, she concludes by saying that 'women must have a room of their own to write.'