<span>The dialogue between the psychiatrist and the protagonist in "The Happy Man" is meant to....
-show the protagonist's sense of self fulfillment
The dialogue between the psychiatrist and the protagonist shows that the happy man is not alone in his situation. That the psychiatrist also have clients that have the same claim as the happy man and that they are sane. Upon hearing this, the happy man finally accepted his happiness.
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The age of Dryden marks the beginning of Restoration in England. That is a period where all three monarchies were reunited under one rule, that of Charles II.
Answer:
it is an example of a person who is happy no matter how much money they have. they are content and money can't fix that
Answer: Gordimer´s political beliefs are reflected in this story in a way that she puts her view with the device os negatie dialects. For example: “art is the negative knowledge of the
actual world” (“Reconciliation Under Duress” ). Rather, art explores what is not known and
as Adorno explains, “art does not become knowledge with reference to mere immediate reality”
. Throughout her novels, Gordimer avoids references to the “immediate reality.” As Ettin
explains, we never get a full picture of the plot and instead the reader must orient himself by considering what has not been said. As Gordimer draws on the theories of Adorno, she portrays the strong appeal of this German, Jewish theorist, further distancing herself from the genre of
black authors and redefining the objective of a political novel.