Answer:
In <em>Cry, the Beloved Country</em> written Alan Paton tells us about a family Kumalo that represents an average black family from South Africa. Their village Ndotsheni is poor and has not so developed agricultural side, so most of the people go to Johannesburg in order to find a job and earn for a living. Several members of the Kumalo family moved to the city and all of them took the morally wrong path living an indecent life.
<em>In contrast to filthy Ndotsheni where black people live and struggle with poverty, there is High Place up on the hill - a beautiful farm that belongs to a wealthy white man Jarvis where his family lives peacefully and like in a paradise</em>. So, two completely different worlds coexist one beside another and their paths finally directly cross at the end of the novel where Jarvis sends milk to children living in Ndotsheni, though characters of the story meet a lot earlier.
The term Tabula rasa was developed mainly by John Locke; saying that when children are born they are in a neutral state!
Answer:
The war that was described in the book "Red Badge of Courage" would be the American Civil War.
Explanation:
Answer: To highlight that Mooreland is a small and quiet town
Explanation:
In the book/memoir by Haven Kimmel known as <em>A Girl Named Zippy: Growing Up Small in Mooreland, Indiana</em>, Haven, who was nicknamed Zippy by her father, describes, as the title suggests, growing up in Mooreland.
The town had a population of 300 and had only one main street on which there was a four-way stop sign, the only one in the town. This detail was put there to highlight how small and quiet the town was because bigger towns usually have multiple stop signs in order to control a heavier flow of traffic.
If Mooreland had only one of those, it most probably meant that they did not need more because their town was too small too need more.