Asked by nemo

Language and Style: Apply
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Activity 1
Choose one of the texts and explain how the author uses an analogy to convey a particular idea. Then, write your own analogy that describes the text you chose in some way.

Activity 2
Like all literary texts, both “When I Think About Myself” and “Zero Hour” are products of the time in which they were written:

Maya Angelou published the poem in 1971, having experienced a lifetime of racism and struggle as a Black woman.
Ray Bradbury first published the short story in 1947, just two years after the end of World War II, and at a time when people had begun to recognize the destructive potential of technology.
In an essay of 300 to 500 words, analyze the language of each text and share your thoughts about what it indicates about the historical and cultural surroundings of both the author and the audience. Include in your discussion an evaluation of each author’s success in creating a work whose language stands the test of time and is able to convey truths to a modern-day audience.

Use specific quotations and evidence from the texts to support your analysis. Organize your essay clearly, and follow the rules of English grammar and punctuation.

Self-Assess
Use the rubric to decide whether your essay fulfills the standards of ideas/purpose; analysis; organization; comprehension; and grammar, conventions, and spelling.

Language and Style Apply Rubric

as a example and make it long

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
I can do that — I’ll write a long model response that completes both Activity 1 and Activity 2 and include a sample self‑assessment against the rubric. Before I begin, one quick question so I get this exactly how you want it:

Do you want direct quotations from the two original texts included in the essay? If so, could you paste the full texts or the specific lines you want quoted? I don’t want to risk misquoting either Maya Angelou or Ray Bradbury.

If you prefer, I can still produce the full example using careful paraphrase and discussion without direct quotes; tell me which you prefer.