Antigone's death resolves the conflict.
This is a debatable topic and there are many claims/arguments that both sides can use, thus this is more reliant on the speaker's opinion. For example: It is more difficult to keep bias out of video because the video shows an like a car crash and it is blatantly obvious this "x" was at fault for the car crash. Or it is not harder but the same because the vocabulary and wording can be manipulated in ways to imply a different story than what has truly transpired. It is just pretty much up to you.
Imagery in literary nonfiction refers to description that appeals to the five senses. Usually the technique involves using vivid and descriptive language to make the people imagine whatever the author is trying to convey.
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Answer:
"That man over there... aind ain't I a woman" - Rhetorical Question
This is beacause of the question posed by the speaker "ain't I a woman." This is more of a statement of fact than an interrogative statement. As such the speaker isn't looking for an answer, but is instead making a point.
"For who is there... torn from his limbs" - Rhetorical Question for the same reason as above.
<em>Answer:</em>
The ones that are informative are an encyclopedia (a resource that contains articles and information on various topics), a newspaper report on a political event (states activities and quotes that happened) , and a product manual (provides instructions on how to use or take cake of a product).
A crime fiction book, a comic book, a romantic novel, and science fiction book are not informative because they are all made up of imaginary events and people.