I will go over somethings before I can answer this.
Why Does The Media Affect Our Body Image?
If a person is on television, say for a reporter or someone else, they might make you look <em>better </em>or <em>worse. </em>You can never appear on TV by "Just Being You." People will say to women, "Add makeup!" People will say to men <em>and women sometimes</em>, "Wear better clothing!" Now this isn't just to make you mad, ugly, or prettier. This is just how you want yourself to look like in over a thousand people's presence. If you are shy, you might actually want this. But it usually isn't who you are.
What Do Books Have On Our Appearance?
Now <em>books </em>are a different story. Books usually count on illustrations. Say you wrote a story about your love for butterflies. On the title cover, your title was "Butterflies and Me." Under this writing, your illustrator (you or someone else) drew you and a butterfly landing on your finger. This drawing could be realistic or cartoonish-it depends on you. How would you like to expose yourself in a book? Any realistic drawing couldn't be <em>you exactly-</em>but it would be close. Books will have a change on our appearance just by this.
Books Vs Media!
Books and media sometimes connect in a way. You write a story and someone makes a movie from your story. Say the main character is "I". <em>You </em>are the main character in your story. Now if you drew yourself in a book realistic-like, and then the movie made you exactly what you drew, that would be the only change in your appearance. But if you drew yourself cartoon, and the movie made you realistic, then you've got your own change. Your appearance on books and your appearance on movies are their own change-movies might be realistic or cartoon, and your book would be completely opposite.
The Final Answer Is...
The final answer is yes, books can contribute to this problem.
Answer:
B. Learn to use interactive art tools
Explanation:
A realistic goal is one that you know that you have a chance of completing. You might not be able to master them and you wont be able to become a world famous artist that quickly. And memorizing the entire page is also not that realistic.
Answer:
so that they may have a better understanding of the thing that they are reading reviews about, and it comes from people who usually have gotten the product or item.
Explanation:
Answer:
do u want me to write it myslef?
Explanation:
im confusion. please be specific.
Answer:
The sadness of death.
Explanation:
Sandra Cisneros' <em>The House on Mango Street</em> is a collection of short narrative stories about a young girl Esperanza. The book contains numerous short stories under different titles telling a story of specific parts of her life.
The vignette "Papa Who Wakes Up Tired Early in the Dark" tells the story of how his hardworking father had to go to their ancestral home for the death of her abuelito. She saw her "poor papa" crying as if he had just heard the news all over again.
"Born Bad," tells the story of how Aunt Lupe lived her life in darkness, for she was blind. And when she died, Esperanza declares "And then we began to dream the dreams".
"Geraldo No Last Name" is a story about Geraldo who had died in an accident and Marin was the last to see him alive. She did not know his last name, nor does she know a lot about the dead guy for why does it matter? But the narrator states <em>"the ones he left behind are far away, will wonder, shrug. remember. Geraldo-he went north ... we never heard from him again".
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All three vignettes have a common theme of the sadness of the death of a person and how it affects others no matter what they may have thought of him/ her while he/ she was living.