Answer:
This should be foreshadowing. Hope this helps!
Explanation:
I just took the test and the answer is c. man vs self. Hope this helps anyone who is struggling with this question!
Answer:
Dear(blank), Im finally home now, or what is suppose to be my home. Everything has changed, it's so different, the small cafe on the corner of Robinson and Mcway is gone(it's just and IKEA now). I walked into my room today and it just felt different, like a strange feeling when you know its you're but it doesn't. Starting to think I've been gone to long but i met up with Jack and were going to the park later to go skating again. Wow have I missed those times, he's really grown up from being a 4'8 tall boy to a 5'9 tall man. Now that I'm back I'll probably go looking for a job since I finished Uni. Wonder how your doing, more then likely well I presume. At last I'm home ready for new adventures that await me. Love you're friend (blank)
Explanation:
<span>The answer would be C. serious tone</span>
Answer:
One of the main points in the poem is that race doesn't mean that we are inherently different from one another. As people, we have many things (feelings, experiences) in common. However, in the cruel world we live in, race does make a difference. In a racist world that Hughes lived in (and that we still live in), people of color have had less access to education, social status, and social mobility.
Explanation:
The poem reads: "I guess being colored doesn’t make me <em>not</em> like // the same things other folks like who are other races." That is the point of intersection, where all people are alike. Then, he goes on to say to his white teacher: "As I learn from you, // I guess you learn from me— // although you’re older—and white— // and somewhat more free." This white, old, male (and presumably rich) teacher is a part of his young colored student and vice versa. <u>It's a kind of a universal feedback loop, a cycle that connects all humans without erasing their mutual differences.</u>
However, when someone belongs to a minority, the experience of having a minority role model can be very important, even formative. That is why Justyce (a character from Nic Stone's novel "Dear Martin") finds it so invigorating to have a black teacher. <u>Doc shows Justyce that it is possible to overcome all the obstacles that the society imposes on people of color.</u> Doc fully understands what being a colored teenager means; that is why he doesn't reprimand Justyce when he finds him drunk. Instead, he talks to him.