Question
Read the excerpt from This Land Was Made for You and Me.
Just after New Year’s Day in 1940, Woody set off on one of his unannounced road trips. He left his wife and three kids in a shack in Texas and headed for New York City. It was a long, cold trip in the dead of winter, and every time he stopped in a diner he heard Irving Berlin’s lush, sentimental song, “God Bless America,” on the jukebox. It was exactly the kind of song Woody couldn’t stand, romanticizing America, telling people not to worry, that God would take care of everything.
The author illustrates the connection between Guthrie’s life and his music by explaining that
Guthrie was not motivated to write music about his family or Texas.
the song "God Bless America" convinced Guthrie that his family would be fine without him.
the message Guthrie heard in "God Bless America" contrasted with what he was going through.
Guthrie did not worry about things and did not write songs about the concept of worry.
Just after New Year’s Day in 1940, Woody set off on one of his unannounced road trips. He left his wife and three kids in a shack in Texas and headed for New York City. It was a long, cold trip in the dead of winter, and every time he stopped in a diner he heard Irving Berlin’s lush, sentimental song, “God Bless America,” on the jukebox. It was exactly the kind of song Woody couldn’t stand, romanticizing America, telling people not to worry, that God would take care of everything.
The author illustrates the connection between Guthrie’s life and his music by explaining that
Guthrie was not motivated to write music about his family or Texas.
the song "God Bless America" convinced Guthrie that his family would be fine without him.
the message Guthrie heard in "God Bless America" contrasted with what he was going through.
Guthrie did not worry about things and did not write songs about the concept of worry.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The author illustrates the connection between Guthrie’s life and his music by explaining that **the message Guthrie heard in "God Bless America" contrasted with what he was going through.** This highlights Guthrie's disdain for the sentimental and romanticized view of America presented in the song, especially in light of his own struggles and the reality of his situation at that time.
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