Answer:
there is no passage therefore i cant help
Explanation:
Answer:
The Crucible explores how mass hysteria can devastate a community. Hysteria is most clearly seen in the villagers' irrational acceptance of the girls’ fabricated claims of witchcraft. One specific example of hysteria occurs in Act III when the girls, led by Abigail, accuse Mary Warren of witchcraft to prevent her from testifying against them. Though multiple people (including Mary) have claimed that the witchcraft accusations are false, the court refuses to be swayed.Mass hysteria is a social phenomenon where imaginary fear and anxiety spread uncontrollably throughout a population. Throughout the play "The Crucible," hysteria regarding witchcraft spreads through the community of Salem and results in the numerous deaths of innocent victims. Following the initial accusations, Abigail and the other girls falsely testify that certain individuals are involved in witchcraft and have begun to curse community members. During the trials, each girl feigns illness and gets caught up in the hysteria. The girls follow Abigail's erratic behavior and actually believe that they are being attacked by a person's spirit. Nowhere is hysteria more evident than in Act Three when Abigail mentions that there is an invisible bird flying throughout the room and begs Mary Warren not to hurt her. The other girls join Abigail and begin to repeat everything that Mary says. Mary becomes terrified and joins the hysterical girls as they begin to accuse John Proctor of colluding with the Devil. During her hysterical fit, Mary Warren says, "He come at me by night and every day
to sign, to sign, to-" (Miller, 121). The hysteria creates a tension filled atmosphere, which angers Proctor to the point of saying, "God is dead" (Miller, 122). Unfortunately, the court officials believe the hysterical girls and sentence many innocent individuals to death.
Explanation:
Answer:
The British fear local colonial governments in the buildup to the Revolutionary War because. Colonial governments actively resisted British policies.
Explanation:
Until he reached the coast, Equiano reports that he was able to understand the language of the people he lived with. It can be inferred from this line that each village had its own dialect of a common African language.
The correct option is c.
Olaudah Equiano in his autobiography “Life of Olaudah Equiano” tells about the lives and struggles that a slave has to go through. The blacks of Africa, especially the children were used to be kidnapped from their family and were sold as slaves. They were separated from their mother, father, and relations and sent off far places. Their real identities were erased and were given new names. They were punished in the most inhuman way because of simple reasons.
Answer:
to create contrast for the character through memories of happier times