Answer:
it is a course and effect organizer
Answer:
Before reading the article, it is good to know that it is a self-help article, which talks about the importance of sharing feelings.
Explanation:
The article begins by talking about the meeting of two elderly people who were together in the Nazi concentration camps when they were teenagers. In this meeting they share the situations they went through during their confinement, in addition to talking about their feelings about it and about the life they currently have, establishing a strong friendship between them.
After describing the meeting of these gentlemen, the article lists the importance of expressing feelings when we go through a difficult situation. The article does this, showing as an example the family and friends of a girl who died and how expressing what they feel helps them to overcome the sadness of the loss. However, the title of the article does not give any hint that this topic will be discussed, so it would be good to know that part of the article before reading it.
The word jerry tells you it is written in third person as 'you' would suggest second person and 'i' would suggest first person
In this chapter we feel the cruelty that the banks are inflicting on the farmers. The tone is antagonistic, desperate and forlorn. Often, neighbours mow over the shacks of their friends because banks are paying them a meagre salary to feed their own families. There really is a sense of desperation; aggravation and finally resignation in the people that watch their lives disintegrate into dust.
Our Town by Thornton Wilder is a modernist play because it explores the transience of human life, in a sense that the characters in the play highlight the significance of the little things that they do in their daily lives. The play is also narrated through the view of a stage manager which openly tells the audience about how the stage is designed and what each prop is meant for. The stage manager is a character both inside and outside the play which blurs the wall between the reality that what the audience is about to see is fictional, and the fiction that the play is supposedly real in the character's point of view. This characteristic of the play destabilizes the line between fact and fiction and is considered a modernist play based on that setting itself, among all other themes of the play.