The Reconstruction era is always a challenge to teach. First, it was a period of tremendous political complexity and far-reaching consequences. A cursory survey of Reconstruction is never satisfying, but a fuller treatment of Reconstruction can be like quick sand—easy to get into but impossible to get out of. Second, to the extent that students may have any preconceptions about Reconstruction, they are often an obstacle to a deeper understanding of the period. Given these challenges, I have gradually settled on an approach to the period that avoids much of the complex chronology of the era and instead focuses on the “big questions” of Reconstruction.
However important a command of the chronology of Reconstruction may be, it is equally important that students understand that Reconstruction was a period when American waged a sustained debate over who was an American, what rights should all Americans enjoy, and what rights would only some Americans possess. In short, Americans engaged in a strenuous debate about the nature of freedom and equality.
With the surrender of Confederate armies and the capture of Jefferson Davis in the spring of 1865, pressing questions demanded immediate answers.
From the excerpt that we have here, the way that the ghost affected Brutus was that: Brutus accepts the ghost's challenge to meet with him again.
<h3>What is the summary of this excerpt?</h3>
From this excerpt, after Caesar had been betrayed, his ghost visited Brutus because he wanted to see him in Phillipi.
Althouh Brutus was afraid, he still tried to act brave by making the promise to meet with the ghost at that venue.
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Answer:
Heat is transferred through multiple things, electricity, light, radiation, friction, even freezing things if it is freezed enough.
Explanation:
<span>Transference
In a therapy context, transference refers to redirection of a patient's feelings for a significant person to the therapist. ... Countertransference is defined as redirection of a therapist's feelings toward a patient, or more generally, as a therapist's emotional entanglement with a patient.</span>