The correct answer is C. Jazz follows a strict tradition and morality.
Jazz does not follow strict tradition and morality and is highly based on improvisation, which helped his popularity. Strict tradition would not help it.
The epigraph to Things Fall Apart is taken from Yeats' poem, "The Second Coming."
The first four lines to this poem are an accurate description of what happens to Okonkwo. At the beginning of the novel, life for Okonkwo is passing normally as it had for years. Over the course of the novel, however, things begin to fall apart. In short, "the center cannot hold."
Due in part to his own actions (and his overwhelming desire to be the opposite of his father) Okonkwo goes from being a respected member of Umuofia to being an exile. After the missionaries arrive, things fall apart for Okonkwo even further. Ultimately, Okonkwo falls from grace and takes his own life.
The epigraph to the novel perfectly summarizes the path of Okonkwo in the novel. He goes from being wealthy and respected to someone whose actions make him an outcast and contribute to his death.
This question is about "Hatchet"
Answer and Explanation:
1. The point of view used in the story only reveals Brian's thoughts and feelings, not showing us deeply any other character and what are their motivations, actions and thoughts. In that case, we can get to know Brian deeply and have sympathy for his actions.
2. Brian is a traumatic person who has had many sad moments. If the author used the point of view in first person, with Brian telling his own story, this could generate an exaggerated and biased narration. This is because for us, what has gone wrong is always much greater than we imagine. A third-person point of view, however, limited, can present Brian's facts and thoughts as they really are, impartially and let the reader make his own conclusion. Furthermore, the third-person point of view presents a reliable narrator, the first-person point of view does not present a reliable narrator.
A. Jack kerouac's is the answer to your question