Im pretty sure it was a mouse
- was there any choice answers?
The trips to South Boston meant economic survival for Henrietta and her family because South Boston was the place that the Lacks took their tobacco crops for auctioning.
- The regular trips to South Boston happened after the tobacco harvest, depicting the Lacks as poor tobacco farmers.
- However, the main lesson from the non-fiction, "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" by Rebecca Skloot, explored the problems of racism, classism, and sexism in America.
- When Henrietta became sick and was diagnosed of cervical cancer, her cells, widely known as HeLa, were taken for medical research purposes without her full knowledge and expressed consent.
- Since then, many medical advances have been attributed to researches on her ever-living cells, including polio vaccine.
Thus, without the trips to South Boston, Henrietta and her family would have found it too difficult to sell their crops.
Read more stories about Henrietta Lacks and her family at brainly.com/question/17191155
Answer:
She wants to be able to express her individuality through clothing and personal style, as she is starting to come into her own self whilst slowly turning her back to the regime. When Satrapi gets caught for her “punk” clothing on the bottom right panel on p.132 (Satrapi 132), she is ultimately released — an outcome that symbolically foreshadows her eventual freedom from Iran, the veil and the ideologies it represents at the end of Persepolis.
Despite its negative connotations, the veil has physically and metaphorically guided Satrapi to her eventual freedom. Despite her initial state of conformity, at the end of her journey in Persepolis, Satrapi is no longer metaphorically ‘veiled’ or blinded by disinformation or deceptive ideologies behind the regime as she is able to think freely and critically for herself. The wearing of the veil itself has caused Satrapi to realize how important it is to express and embrace individuality, rather than choose to be defined by patriarchal and conformist ideologies at the hands of another.