Answer:
Kovaloff doesn't question why his nose is walking and talking.
Explanation:
Magical realism is a literary chain that aims to merge the magical universe with reality, showing unreal or strange elements as something habitual and commonplace.
In the short story "The Nose" of Nicolai Gogól, Major Kovalióv wakes up and realizes that instead of his nose there is a "perfectly perfect place". The major does not question the reason that made his nose disappear, but decides to look for it and finds the nose dressed as a high-ranking officer and pretending to be a human. This represents the magical realism of the short story of "the nose," because even without the nose on his face, and finding his nose pretending to be a human being, the major is not surprised at all of this and acts as if it were a common thing.
Brave New World<span> warns of the dangers of giving the state control over new and powerful technologies. One illustration of this theme is the rigid control of reproduction through technological and medical intervention, including the surgical removal of ovaries, the Bokanovsky Process, and hypnopaedic conditioning. Another is the creation of complicated entertainment machines that generate both harmless leisure and the high levels of consumption and production that are the basis of the World State’s stability. Soma is a third example of the kind of medical, biological, and psychological technologies that </span>Brave New World<span> criticizes most sharply.</span>
First, we need to give Mike Foster's puppies a bath. Then, we'll dress them up in tiny sweaters.