Answer: When we inhabit the world, we are constantly seeing. Perception is an ongoing reality—we are always taking in the world, and only after the fact do we name it. Thus begins Ways of Seeing, drawing our attention to the fraught relationship between vision, images, words, and meaning. Our understanding of what we see doesn't generally align with the objective facts of what we're seeing: for example, we see the sun set every night, while we know that it isn't really "setting," but rather, the earth is simply revolving away from it. Likewise, we can attempt to capture what we see, reproducing or recreating it for others so that they can try to understand how we perceive the world. To do so is to create an image: "an image is a sight which has been recreated or reproduced." In so doing, we remove the image from the original circumstances under which it was seen. In this sense, every image embodies what Berger calls "a way of seeing": a record of how its creator saw the world. Images can preserve things as they once were, and simultaneously, preserve how their creator once saw their subject. Images, more so than any other relics from the past, offer a direct testimony as to how people saw—and, by extension, understood—the world.
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Answer:
the chill outside" and "by the kitchen instead" wilL be the most appropriate one to determine the meaning of alfresco.
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Stopping a bully
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Ya, stopping a bully seems like something easy to do, but really you can have a lot of consequences to standing up for someone. But bullies are normally rude to people because they themselves are going through a hard time. Idk if that made sense but hopefully this helps you!
The above question wants to analyze your reading and writing skills, for that reason I can't write the summary for you but I will show you how to write it.
A summary should be short and straightforward text, where you show the most important parts of other text.
Therefore, to write a summary you must:
- Read the text your question refers to.
- Identify the most important parts.
- Rewrite these parts.
It is important that you use your own words, but keep the meaning of the original text, to avoid plagiarism.
More information about summary at the link:
brainly.com/question/24858866
Answer:
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Plot Element Events from Fourteen
exposition Mrs. Pringle’s guests have begun to back out of a dinner party in which she hopes to show off her daughter. She pauses in her fit long enough gush about the idea of the Prince of Wales attending and thoughts of what it would do for her social standing in New York.
rising action More and more guests call with regrets and Mrs. Pringle and her daughter Elaine, along with the butler, Dunham try to figure out how to maintain the perfect number of guests, which is fourteen.
climax In a panic as the hour grows late and the number of guests is back at only twelve, Mrs. Pringle rants that she is done with entertaining and with one guest in particular—Oliver Farnsworth, whom she had hoped would want to marry Elaine.
falling action Mrs. Pringle receives a note from Mr. Farnsworth announcing that the Prince of Wales will be attending in his place, and she realizes that the prince is already in her home waiting to be invited to dinner.
resolution The number of guests is back to fourteen with the presence of the prince, and Mrs. Pringle no longer cares where the guests sit or that Elaine thinks well of Mr. Farnsworth because she has already set her sights on the prince as a better possibility for her daughter.
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sample answer