Answer:
Active reconstruction of events alters our memory of the important and unimportant events of our lives
Explanation:
According to the study of Cognitive Psychology, memory can be defined as an ability to receive information, store it and recall it when required.
The memory works in three stages namely encoding, storage, and retrieval. Also, there are three types of memories: sensory memory, short term memory, and long term memory.
The key theme that has been found in memory research is that is an active process of alteration of memory of important and unimportant events through the process of reconstruction. When new memories are created, it alters some of the important or unimportant events from memories of the past.
For example, one would have a very vague memory of childhood because new memories are created.
Answer:
Simile
Explanation:
Similies are figures of speech that use ''like'' and ''as'' in order to compare two things.
I think it’s a she couldn’t handle the memories that created suffering
Answer:
Anything; as long as you are enjoying yourself and enjoying the process. :)
The correct answers are: the corruption of those in power, propaganda spread to induce confusion, Stalin's attempt to expand industry.
Indeed, when Napoleon (Stalin) starts pretending that he had originally thought of Snowball’s (Trotsky) windmill and that he only opposed it on tactic grounds this is clear example of the propaganda techniques the real Stalin used to completely discredit Leon Trotsky and ban him from the Soviet Union. The windmill represents the Five Year Plans for the national economy of the Soviet Union. Initially, Stalin opposed them, but later on he supported them and pretended that they were his creation. The Russian people were very confused by all this infighting and Stalin not only got them confused with all his falsifications, he also provided them with a simple version that they could cling to in order to have some understanding of the reality around them (propaganda). He also used this propaganda to get Leo Trotsky removed from power and banned from the Soviet Union.
Finally, the Soviet society was divided between an official, privileged nomenclature of apparatchiks that enjoyed far more power and standards of living that any regular Soviet citizen. The system eventually became as corrupt as the previous czarist system they had overthrown. Regular citizens were under rationed food and supplies while the Soviet elites were feasting on the riches produced by the Soviet people.