Answer:
d i believe this is the answer
Explanation:
1. Young adult literature can expose teens to sexual content. This puts it in the teens mind that sex or other sexual activities are a "must do." Similar to the argument of "do violent video games encourage violence?" does seeing sexual content in books normalize young sex?
2. These books may romanticize things that shouldn't be romanticized (ie: mental illness, death, violence, cancer, etc.)
3. YA can put unrealistic ideas into teens heads (ie: being a millionaire by age 20 only by hard work, falling in love with your soulmate after meeting them a few hours prior)
4. They might not accurately portray the life of teenagers, therefore misguiding teenagers. They are written mostly by adults and some haven't been teenagers in a long time, so they might not know what teens are struggling with now days.
Hope this helped!
~Just a girl in love with Shawn Mendes
I inferred you are referring to the Nigerian born writer Chimamanda Adichie's account found here (https://www.ted.com/talks/chimamanda_ngozi_adichie_the_danger_of_a_single_story?language=en).
<u>Explanation:</u>
Remember, in Adichie's talk she said referring to Fide, "the only thing my mother told me was that his family was very poor."
Later after she saw the basket fide's brother made she said "it had not occurred to me that anybody in his family could actually make something". This stereotyped view expressed in her words above complements the story of her college roommate’s stereotyped view of Adichie when she said, "she asked where I learned to speak English so well,....she had felt sorry for me even before she saw me. My roommate had a single of Africa; in this single-story, there was no possibility of Africans being similar to her in any way."
Indeed, her talk would have had a different impact without the story of Fide and his family, considering the fact that this was a real-life story so it made the best impact.
QUESTION 6; c. television offers good and bad programming for families
QUESTION 7; b. it is ineffective support because it does not help prove the claim.
QUESTION 8; a. examples of situations when organ donations have saved lives
QUESTION 9; b. it is ineffective support because it does not help prove the claim.
QUESTION 10; b. the driving age should be raised for three clear reasons.
Answer:
Okonkwo is both a sympathetic as well as an unsympathetic character as he has the emotion and zeal to do things right. But at the same time, he also makes sure not to show these feelings and emotions, in the belief that people may think he's weak, thus presenting himself as a 'strong-willed' manly family man.
Explanation:
Chinua Achebe's novel "Things Fall Apart" revolves around the story of an African man Okonkwo, chronicling his life from youth to his 'mature' life as the head of his family. Also present in the plot is the emergence or presence of the White 'foreigners' who had come to 'civilize' the people and the conflict between the two.
In looking at the character of Okonkwo, we can conclude that he is both a sympathetic as well as an unsympathetic character. This is because <u>he is strong, self-made, and has emotions, beliefs, and wants to be different from his father.</u> He appears continually afraid of being called or thought weak like his father Unoka, who was unable to take care of his family. And that was why he wanted to be so different from his father in the way he wanted to take care of his family. But at the same time, <u>he also appears as an unsympathetic character in that he does not believe in showing his emotions externally, rather keeping them inside and even preventing his sons to appear weak</u>. In this sense, his adopted son Ikemefuna is more of a man to him, appearing strong and manly while his real son Nwoye is weak, for he has lots of emotions making him less of a man.