Answer:
This article presents the rare Robert Louis Stevenson case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde under the lens of disability studies as they explore the role disability plays in creating Mr. Hyde as a villain.
Explanation:
Using both historical and current understanding of disability, this article discusses how Mr. Hyde's social and cultural disagreements depend on understanding disability as "deformed." "What makes Mr. Hyde so scary" may be what makes Mr. Hyde so scary for other characters, and perhaps also for readers, is not an inherent evil, but disability itself.
Answer:
Slavery was a really bad practice by rich and intelligent people.They took them for their experiments and to conquer the resources and gave them no resources and they couldn't get even food also.This shows us a man-made disaster which will never be forgotten in the history.
Hope it helps....feel fred to answer.
C.lesser to greater is answer