The revelation that Vladeck and Anja were under arrest is shocking to the reader, as the story creates hope that they will manage to escape without being arrested.
Although you have not shown the text to which this question refers, we can see from the context of the question that you are referring to "Maus" by Art Spiegelman
, a biographical graphic novel, which recounts the journey of Vladeck and Anja, two Polish Jews who survived the holocaust.
Reading the graph novel reveals the following information:
- Jews gradually lost rights and freedoms.
- Anja and Vladeck, suffered all these losses, reaching the point where they needed to stay hidden to avoid being arrested and taken to concentration camps.
- The hiding places were too dangerous.
- Anja and Vadeck received an offer to travel to Hungary with a middleman, as Hungary had not been invaded by Nazi forces.
- The middleman was working alongside the Nazis and tricked Vladeck and Anja.
- At the beginning of the trip to Hungary, the middleman informed the Nazis that Vladeck and Anja were on the train.
- At that point, they were arrested and taken to concentration camps.
During the reading, the reader is apprehensive about the persecution that Anja and Vladeck suffer and creates an empathy for them, reaching the point that the reader wants them to manage to flee to Hugria. In this case, when they are arrested the reader is surprised, as they are surprised and saddened, as they had proof that the middleman was a trustworthy person and that the trip was safe.
You can find more information about "Maus" at the link below:
brainly.com/question/1130648?referrer=searchResults
A good word choice i would guess that it would be small and a hermet because they love living alone in their cottages
Answer:
Animation
Explanation:
just like a cartoon, it is animation because someone drew that, and then now it's a character that moves. ur welcome
At the end of "Notes of a Native Son", Baldwin's argument that resolves one of his central ideas is C. That hatred or acceptance are choices one must make.
Upon his father's death, Baldwin had a sort of epiphany: he was finally able to understand the meaning behind the words his father had preached for so many years. He comes to the conclusion that to choose to be bitter, to choose to hate, is an unintelligent choice: "But I knew that it was folly, as my father would have said, this bitterness was folly. It was necessary to hold on to the things that mattered."
He then moves on to the last paragraph concerning the two ideas a person can hold in their mind: total acceptance and non-acceptance. Total acceptance means conformity, seeing "injustice as a commonplace" and living as if nothing can or should be done, for things will never change. On the other hand, however, non-acceptance is never taking injustice as commonplace, it is fighting it.
Such fight, however, must not be carried out with hatred, since hatred destroys the one who hates as well. As Baldwin says, "it had now been laid to my charge to keep my own heart free of hatred and despair." No other person could have made that decision but himself. However opposite the ideas may sound, he chose to not accept and to not hate.
Answer:
what sentence
Explanation:
I mean I could help you but I need to know what sentence