Answer and Explanation:
The "midnight prohibition" can be found in the Cinderella fairy condo, where she needs to return home before midnight, as this is the expiration date of the spell that the fairy godmother made so she could go to the ball, that is, the "midnight prohibition" represents the end of Cinderella's spell and enchantment moment.
This reinforces the "paradigm of traditional socialization" in two ways. The first form reflects the questioning of a maiden outside the home, unaccompanied very late at night, in addition, this reinforces the plot that Cinderella as a maiden must be saved and found by the prince and not the other way around.
<span>The use of allusion in the title and epigraph of Nectar in a Sieve helps to emphasize the novel’s themes of loss and hope
Nectar in a Sieve alludes to the slow drain of the life force of an individual here on earth. The nectar represents live and the sieve, since it is a sifter/filter, slowly drains the nectar until it falls to the ground and become useless.
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Instead of “your” it should be “you’re”.