The answer would be <em>A: ratification</em>
Answer:
The teacher is blindly biased towards what she perceives as the only 'American culture'.
Explanation:
Ms. Wilde is clearly an example of an educator that is a little behind the times. All of her education material is based on the reality (most likely) of the world she lived in while growing up. She fails to realize that she now lives in a multicultural country and must make adjustments accordingly.
The tortilla scene is a perfect example of a lack of multiculturalism. Tortillas are one of the many food that are widely consumed across the United States by both people of Mexican descent and people with not a trace of Mexican descent. Tortillas represent a cultural commodity that has become part of a very 'American' cuisine that is Tex-Mex.
Regardless of the origins of the tortillas, the rejection by the teacher of something she does not eat is closed-mindedness. The assumption that because she does not eat them, neither do the rest of the students is a lack of openness and multiculturalism.
Dear brother,
The amount of junk food is bad for your health. You are not getting the necrssary vitamins and minerals to support your body. Instead, you are getting a lot of calories and storing fat in your body.
From your sibling
Answer:
C
Explanation:
I think the film is stunning
The image of blood is shown through Lady Macbeth's constant action like she is washing her hands. She exclaims that all of the washing in the world cannot get the blood off her hands. This is almost as if she is seeing her guilt on her hands and trying to clear herself of that guilt.
Darkness is shown through the fact that Lady Macbeth seems to be afraid of the darkness. The doctor says that she requires a candle to be by her bedside at all times and refuses to be in the dark.
The idea of sleep, or the loss of sleep is reinforced through this scene as Lady Macbeth is sleepwalking. Right after he commits the murder of Duncan, Macbeth is afraid that he hears whispering in the castle that he has "murdered sleep" and that the house will "sleep no more". The fact that Lady Macbeth is sleepwalking shows that she cannot truly sleep or rest because of the guilt of all the murders.
This scene redeems Lady Macbeth in the eyes of the audience because it shows that she is actually feeling guilt and remorse for the crimes she convinced Macbeth to commit. The fact that she is wrestling so hard with her conscience shows that she understands what she has done, and that type of remorse and guilt can help redeem a character in the eyes of the audience, to see her feel pain for what she's done.