"It is distinctly possible to remain too long at the Fair." - The fair is usually a gathering of people for the commerce or entertainment. It is a place where everything is fun, new, and within reach. However, it is only located in a limited space and once you have explored all that there is to explore, all the things you've enjoyed in your first perusal would gradually lose its charm until you get fed up with the fair. That is what she meant by that.
She stayed too long in New York because she said so. Her initial plan was to stay for only six months, in the end, she stayed for eight years.
It lets you re use claims
let’s you target specific parts of an argument for certain supporting ideas
let’s you and another person so is your opinions and ideas
<span>The best
archetype for the character of Hero is The Ingénue.</span>
<span>
Hero is a character from the Classic Greek Myth “Hero and Leander”. She is a priestess
who falls in love with a young boy (Leander). Every night she would light a
lantern to guide Leander’s way, who would swim to her tower. One night though,
the storm blew out the lantern and Leander had drowned. Because of this unfortunate
event, Hero threw herself over the edge of the tower, and towards her death to
be with her lover. </span>
Cooley meant by “looking-glass self” with respect to the socialization process as individuals developing their self concept through observing how they are perceived by others.
<h3>What is Socialization?</h3>
This is defined as the process in which societal norms and culture are internalized by individual.
Self concept is determined through the way individuals are perceived after due observation.
Read more about Socialization here brainly.com/question/10455747
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Throughout <u>The Book Thief</u> there are numerous civil rights offenses, as it takes place during a time where discrimination and intolerance were common. The right to privacy, a safe place to live, and unfair imprisonment were violated often during World War II. The main character, Liesel, experiences life different from many of the Jewish people who were mistreated by Nazis, yet she still experiences hardship. Liesel explores the violations she's felt against her freedom of expression during this story. The beginning of this story gives us a sad, abandoned Liesel that has experienced the loss of her family. Through learning to read with her foster father, Liesel begins to understand the power of words and how they can be used to hurt or to help others. As she witnesses injustices the Nazis deliver and how it affects Jewish people, Liesel seeks revenge on Hitler and wants to take away some of what he is destroying. She changes from someone filled with hate and pain to someone with compassion who finds a positive way to help others and express herself. Liesel writes a book to describe the pain she has experienced and witnessed, which helps not only serve justice to those who have been mistreated but also as an outlet for her freedom of expression.