Answer:
This article presents the rare Robert Louis Stevenson case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde under the lens of disability studies as they explore the role disability plays in creating Mr. Hyde as a villain.
Explanation:
Using both historical and current understanding of disability, this article discusses how Mr. Hyde's social and cultural disagreements depend on understanding disability as "deformed." "What makes Mr. Hyde so scary" may be what makes Mr. Hyde so scary for other characters, and perhaps also for readers, is not an inherent evil, but disability itself.
The answer here my good sir is going to be glade I hope this helps you stay safe of the corona virus
He did not have long to wait. On March 12, having given the Viceroy an extra day, Gandhi and seventy-eight others left his ashram and began to walk the two hundred miles to the seacoast. There, he declared, he would take a pinch of salt from the Indian Ocean, thus violating the laws of the Empire, which declared that only the British could harvest salt.
Answer:
In the poem “On Turning Ten” written by Billy Collins, the writer developed the central idea by writing about certain memories of their past and explains that as time passes they grew and got much more mature mindset.In the title of the poem, the first and second line says “The whole idea of it makes me feel like I’m coming down with something”. This shows how the idea of turning ten does not please the author. It also said in the fourth paragraph first line, “This is the beginning of sadness…” this shows that the author must be going through something for him to be so melancholic at such a young age.
Explanation:
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