Answer:
Character: Enthusiastic, Committed, Friendly, Concerned
Explanation:
Physical: Tan, Tall, Brunette
<span>the author’s worldview</span>
<span>Jay Gatsby is intended to be the symbol of the American Dream, he was a poor man who came up from nothing and now owns a mansion on the water to throw the most lavish parties. All this money and material is incomparable and unable to fill the void of his deepest want--Daisy. But people are not included in the American Dream, and F Scott Fitzgerald leaves a person at the center of Gatsby's fixation because she is unobtainable, and those who wish to pursue the American Dream may not get all that they desire. They lose connections on the way to their success and in turn, The Great Gatsby is a commentary on the breakdown of such an American ideology.</span>
Answer:
“The future cannot be predicted, but futures can be invented,” he wrote in a 1963 book, it was man’s ability to invent which has made human society what it is.”
Explanation:
One modernist author who examined racism and oppression through a story of friendship between an Englishman and an Indian was E.M. Foster, in his most famous work, A Passage to India. The whole novel itself is about whether it will ever be possible for an Indian and an Englishman to become friends, given the circumstances in India after the British colonization. Written in 1924, the novel explores this theme, as well as many other subjects such as oppression and racism.