Answer:
<h3>No, as a reader, I wasn't able to remain equally nonjudgmental as Jeanette.</h3>
Explanation:
I wasn't able to remain equally nonjudgmental as Jeanette because she was brought up in a family where she thinks that her parents had done much more for her than she deserves.
Jeanette refuses to condemn her parents because she is sentimentally connected to them so much. As a reader, I feel that her parents have failed to protect her from sexual predators as they thought that it was normal when in reality it was their duty to protect her from any potential threat.
Jeanette also feels that she should not confront her parents with her personal problems. However, it is rather the parents who have made it 'normal' for her to feel that some things are meant to just 'let it slip'. This is why I think her parents have failed in my perspective.
False because it began in Germany and Lutheranism
Her thinking reflects: the Imaginary audience
The imaginary audience is a psychological occurrence where an individual imagines and believes that an imaginary group of people is currently watching what he/she is doing.
This is very common in young teenagers, the age when they started to grew and seek the approval of other people.
Answer:
Great Britain, France (except during the German occupation, 1940-44), The Soviet Union (after its entry in June 1941), The Unites States (after its entry on December 8th, 1941), and China.