The story "Notes of a Native Son" by James Baldwin describes the stubborn pride Baldwin and his father shared that describes the gap between the generations. Thus, option C is correct.
<h3>What is a generation gap?</h3>
The complete part of the question including the options is: Which sentence best explains how the structure of the excerpt supports the author's purpose?
A. It uses the third-person point of view to convey Baldwin's inner feelings regarding his father.
B. It describes how Baldwin and his father were victims of stubbornness to reveal that pride is a sin.
C. It describes the stubborn pride Baldwin and his father shared to reveal a growing estrangement between generations.
D. It makes a statement about the generation gap that existed in America at the time.
The generation gap is a difference between the two generations that is due to the conflict between the parent and the children. The older generations have more life experiences and are more concerned.
If there is much generation gap then there is a high possibility of clashes and bad-broken relationships. There is a possibility to mend the gap by connecting with each other.
Therefore, in option C. the pride between Baldwin and his father showed the generational gap.
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Answer:
I'd sat 4. a stand-alone episode designed to sell the series
Answer:
Grendel. Although the same characters appear in both Beowulf and Grendel, their characteristics are not the same. Whereas in Beowulf, the round character would be Beowulf, in Grendel that would be Grendel.
Explanation:
wasss good!
1. D: the Bishop is kind and caring and even though ValJean is an ex-convict he is still treated like a human being by the Bishop. Calling him 'brother' further shows how he views all people as equals.
2. D: you would expect ValJean to be grateful for the kindness the Bishop shows him and to accept the food and lodging without causing trouble. ValJean is a former criminal but the Bishop trusted him to not steal what he had. ValJean showed the opposite of these expectations by stealing from the Bishop.
3. C: the Bishop welcomes ValJean into his home and treats him like a real human being. The irony is that as soon as someone treats him like a normal person ValJean starts "stuttering like a madman", acting the way everyone before had assumed he would be (crazy).
Summary. Things are starting to heat up—as they usually do in Act 3. Benvolio and Mercutio are hanging out as usual, trading insults and mocking the Capulets. Trouble materializes in the form of Tybalt, who is trying to find Romeo so he can get back at him for crashing the Capulet party.