by insisting that everyone with a soul deserves rights
In the excerpt she says that "if the negro be a soul, if the woman be a soul...to one Master only are they accountable." Throughout the passage, Fuller uses various ways to insist that everyone deserves rights. She strengthens her arguments by comparing women's rights to those of the negro. She uses her arguments to show that if an African American should not be held in bondage, neither should a woman. It doesn't matter your race or gender, if you have a soul, you deserve the same rights as everyone else.
Flute?
maybe...
Idk...
It might be a different answer...
WHy am I here?
Answer:
It could be D.
Explanation:
This is because a reader would need to know what is being told through the scrapbook and its pictures.
Answer and Explanation:
Hello. You forgot to mention that this question is about "To kill a mockingbird."
The social norm of the time that causes one of the conflicts to which Scout is related is the standard of behavior established for women. This is because Scout has a rough-and-tumble, tomboy behavior, which comes completely out of the sexist standards that women should follow in order to be accepted in society and to be well regarded, to be respected. History suggests how girls were stifled by these standards and how it impeded women's free thinking and positioning in society.