Answer:
B. Tiara, who first thinks camping and cooking are boring and then discovers both are fun.
Explanation:
Among many of the things Cabeza De Vaca describes, some of them are Languages, Healing Methods, and the behavior between a man and his wife.
<h3>Language Lessons
: </h3>
Cabeza De Vaca described the major languages of the people of the Isle of Misfortune. - Chapter Twenty-Six (Page 71)
<h3>
Healing Methods - Chapter Twenty-One (Page 58)</h3>
He recounts that Castillo made the sign of the cross on the Indians and commended them to God. After he did this, they indicated that their pains were gone.
<h3>The behavior between a man and his wife's family
- Chapter Twenty-Four (Page 67)</h3>
Cabeza de Vaca describes here how it is that
- men refused to sleep with their wives from the time they first noticed that they were pregnant until the child became two years in age.
- There was also the practice of leaving children who could not keep up with them as they traveled to die in the desert.
- He also noted that among childless couples, they would leave each other and marry whomever they wanted if there was a disagreement.
Learn more about the Cabeza De Vaca in the link below:
brainly.com/question/1295638
it doesn't require citations it's common knowledge
I think it is because you need them to separate
Answer:
Realism, Ordinary Life, Quest for Spirituality
Explanation:
The features of the modern novel like realism, a quest for romantic love, an event of everyday life and frankness in sexual matters are exhibited in the story Araby. In the story, Joyce intends to portray the paralysis of modern life whether it is intellectual, or moral, or spiritual. The story is a depiction of everyday life of Mangan, an ordinary boy becoming an adult who looks back on a maturing experience of his youth. The boy is on a religious or spiritual quest while his sister represents a kind of goddess or an angel to him. The religious imagery indicates the absence of a spiritual vitality from Irish life. The emptiness, the decay and the banal dialogue show how religion is reduced to just empty ritual. The world of romance and imagination of the narrator is marred by the banal and tawdry world of actual experience. The final sentence shows the boy’s epiphany; he has known the absurdity of both Araby and his quest. The blind street and his trip to Araby appeared leading him to somewhere, but in reality, he stands where he began his quest.