Answer:
Cassava, sweet potatoes, rice and posho (maize bread) are also popular among the Baganda but, in a standard meal, they must be served alongside matooke. Although other Bantu ethnic identities like the Bagisu, Banyankole, Batoro and Basoga also produce and consume matooke, it remains the identity of the Baganda.
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The speaker is burying himself in books, in "many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore," in order to find "surcease of sorrow" over the death of "a rare and radiant maiden whom the angels named Lenore." The whole poem is haunted by the death of this maiden. The speaker wonders if there is an afterlife in which he might hope to meet her again--but the raven replies to all such questions with the single word "Nevermore." In an early stanza of the poem, the speaker throws open the shutter and peers out into the darkness, hoping against hope that the tapping he kept hearing was made by the spirit of Lenore. "The only word there uttered was the whispered word 'Lenore.'" But there is no response. The raven with its single-word vocabulary symbolizes the painful truth the speaker cannot escape--that he has lost his loved one forever.
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Answer:
C. Personal identity and societal expectations
Explanation:
Personal identity is addressed in this narrative when the character, who completely changed the environment to which he was previously inserted, questions his role in society. Before, she lived in the corportive world and had certain responsibilities of that environment, but now she lives in an isolated, completely different place.
In the same way, realizing that she should seek new forms of satisfaction, now in a solitary environment, she raises expectations about the different forms of life that can be expected from society.