It is true that in part, the novel arose to compensate for the limitations of the theater in regards to moral and sentimental subject matter.
Answer:
I might need more context to this question. However, if you're referring to easier ways to compare sources with mental tasks, I would say to underline key words, bold / slanted words and / or look for short definitions at the bottom of your reading.
Usually reading over your notes should help. The answer you're looking for is in plain sight. I promise.
Hope this helps!
Explanation:
Answer:
One pattern that James Joyce used to organize the fifteen stories in Dubline
Answer:
Explanation:
It is written by a man who survived the Nazi death camps. He (in this novel) is a young boy who is taken to the death camps with his father (who did not survive what the Nazis were determined to do -- kill all Jews everywhere).
What you are reading is saying exactly what the words imply. One by one, people were marched to a ditch. They were unarmed. It included men, women and children, all unarmed.
When the got to the trench (which they themselves had dug -- it doesn't tell you that here), they were shot or their throats were cut. Death sometimes didn't come quickly.
Meanwhile, babies were thrown in the air and shot by machine gunners. It was a sport to the Nazis.
I hope that's clear enough. This material is hard to read and hard to write about. Take it seriously. It happened, just as Wisel recorded it.
You can look for more information about the Battle of Little Big Horn here:
http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/custer.htm
Here about General Armstrong Custer:
https://www.civilwar.org/learn/biographies/george-armstrong-custer