In Emilio Gentile’s<span> ‘Politics as Religion,’ </span>Gentile describes the sacralising of Stalin’s regime in the following words:
<span>The sacralization of the party opened the way to the sacralization of Stalin when he became the supreme leader. After 1929, the political religion of Russia mainly concentrated on the deification of Stalin, who until his death in 1953 dominated the party and Soviet system like a tyrannical and merciless deity.</span>
I believe it would be the second option
Answer:
The outcome when Mark Twain tries to persuade different wild and tame animals to accumulate vast stores of food was that they did not do it.
This example shows us of never ending hunger of humans to store more than necessary.
Explanation:
The Lowest Animal is a paper written by Mark Twain of his fictional experiment done with animals.
In lines 52-64, Twain asserts that he tried to persuade animals, both wild and tame, to accumulate vast stores of food line. But he remarks that no one stored food more than they required. Even the bees collected only what was required for them for winters.
This experiment is suggestive of human's nature of greed and hunger for more. Through this experiment, Twain is conveying the message that humans are the animals that comes at the lowest animals and not the other way around.
Answer:
D. Analogy
Explanation:
"Day and night cannot dwell together" and "as the morning mist flees before the morning sun" are analogies because they are comparisons between two things, typically for the purpose of explanation or clarification.
Answer:
In his poem "For a Lady I Know," Countee Cullen depicts the clash between the upper and lower classes of society. The poem is assumed to be about upper-class white Americans who treat African Americans poorly. He points out the audacity of the upper class to presume that African Americans would continue to wait on them forever, even after death:
She even thinks that up in heaven
Her class lies late and snores
While poor black cherubs rise at seven
To do celestial chores.
This poem suggests that white Americans don’t want to help improve the lifestyle of poor African Americans but are comfortable with the minority races serving them forever.
Explanation:
From Plato :)