Yes, the claims said in lines 589 and 616 are true because he did everything not knowing. He killed his father without knowing he was his father, same goes from his mother. He was blinded on who they really were. The gods had control of his fate, so he had no choice on how he could play his life out. With him being blinded and made to do these things, his guilt and complicity can be released because at the start of day the gods are the one who control his life and fate to the end of his life.
Contemporary artist, Ah Kee, has created a work, “Unwritten #9”, references past racial murders and the way they resonate in the present context and explore Australian Indigenous and non-Indigenous culture in the contemporary society. Ah Kee created this series of artworks in response to the apparent police cover up of the death of a young man in their custody and protection of their own lead to accusations of racism, riots by the Islanders and their further oppression by the police. The faces are also non-specific and have no identity, this refers to the devastating history of racism and violence against indigenous peoples in Australia. This symbolism also suggests the often unspoken motivations for actions and interactions between Australians
Discuss filing requirement? - Filing requirements are specified by law for each type of taxpayer. In addition, all corporation must file a tax return annually regardless of their taxable income. Therefore, estates and trusts are required to file annual income tax returns if their gross income exceeds $600. In the filing requirements for individual taxpayers are a little more complex as they depend on the taxpayer’s filing status, age and gross income. The gross income thresholds are calculated as the sum of the standard deduction, additional deduction for taxpayers age 65 or older and personal exemptions that should be applied to each respective filing status. In addition, the amounts are indexed each year for inflation. Thus, when a taxpayer is due a refund which happened to occur only when
6. "The Kokoda Campaign has minimal historical significance." Using all of the sources, evaluate this proposition. (10 marks)
His inaction to help his father helps him become what is going to be in later chapters. In chapter 7 people where throwing bread into the wagon Meir's father got the bread when they threw it in the middle and his son beat him up for the bread even though the father had bread for him. "Meir, my little Meir! Don't you recognize me ... Your killing your father .... I have bread ... for you too ... for you too ..." (Chapter 7, 101). Elie hoped he wouldn't turn into Meir and that he would never do that to his father. In chapter 6 page 91 "He had already gone through the door when I remembered that I had noticed his son running beside me I had forgotten and so had not mentioned it to Rabbi Eliahu! But i had remembered something else: his sone had
Unwritten #9” is a work by contemporary artist, Vernon Ah Kee that focuses on the racial discrimination of indigenous Australians. Apparent in his works are themes such as racism, identity and culture that references the artist’s own backgrounds and experiences. Ah Kee draws on his own experiences of being and aboriginal Australian in the contemporary life in Australia.
An Entrepreneur is a person who forms and operates a business. Entrepreneurs form and start companies by themselves, or with partners. Most of the time companies which are started by entrepreneurs are relatively small in size, but some grow into huge corporations, such as Microsoft which is owned by Bill Gates. Entrepreneurs have four different options when starting a business, which include a sole proprietorship, Partnership, limited liability company, and also a corporation. Each form has its advantages and also disadvantages depending on what the type of business is, and also what service it provides.
Explain and evaluate: “if resources were infinitely abundant in relation to the demand for them, the economizing problem would dissolve in a sea of affluence.”
Use this outline to preview the chapter before you read a particular section in your textbook and then as a selfcheck
2. The "annihilation of time and space," extolled by the public and the press in the late nineteenth century, referred especially to
In Chapter 34 of Henslin, we learn about the transition of moving from the working class to middle class. To begin, we also learn about different capitals. The first is economic capital which is the power and wealth someone has. Second, culture capital which is what knowlege someone has about the world they live in. Third, social capital which is what social conncections someone has. Wealth can sometime seem the only symbol of stratification, but the other two play large part as well.
In chapters 18-20 of The Giver, Jonas is curious about what really happens when someone is “released,” causing the reader to think that Jonas’s curiosities will lead him to discovery. For instance, when Jonas said, “I was only asking about release because my father is releasing a new child today,” and mutters as an afterthought, “I wish I could watch.” The Giver decides that it is time for Jonas to know the truth” (146). This shows that, ever since Jonas got the privilege of asking questions it led him to a burst of wonders about his community, so when it deemed the right time Jonas grew curious To elaborate, Jonas’s curiosity could’ve came from the talk of Gabriel’s release, and as he grew tighter to Gabe, he wanted to know what would really
He was the one with the plan to murder the king, but he was weak and did not want to go through with the plan. After his actions, he felt so much guilt. His guilt eats him away, which shows us that he does not
In Janie’s first marriage with Logan Killick, she learns that he gives her golden treatment for quite a long time before forcing her to help him on the farm. Within this relationship, Janie had learned that she was nothing to him but a pack mule, and as she had left the farm and him for a man named Joe Starks, “a feeling of sudden newness and change came over her. Janie hurried out of the front gate and turned south. Even if Joe was not there waiting for her, the change was bound to do her good.” (32). She had begun to recognize that this was not the life she had wanted for herself, despite her grandmother telling her that it was the life she should pursue.
Over the centuries, the white people have always shown superiority to the blacks. The whites controlled the black community and gave them limited opportunities to spend their life freely. Native Son introduces that slavery and neo-slavery had caused the “development of a psychology of timidity, passivity, and even cowardice among the African American masses” (Wright). Hence, lives of the black people became very different as compared to the white folks. For an example, a woman from both racial groups did not have the same value in society. A young woman belonging to a white family was given higher status and importance in the society than a black woman. Their living conditions were far more peaceful than the women in the
Kerbouchard’s horse was housed by one of his guards who told him where the horse was kept in case he lived through his escape. He rode to the mountains for refuge, knowing it was the home of many thieves. Meeting a herd of goats, he followed Sharasa to her father’s home even though she told him her father would kill him. His courage and words gained reluctant respect from Akim, his host.His stories gained him a respectful acquaintance in Akim.