Asked by bob
What conclusions can you draw from the fact that the final words of the play are spoken from offstage? Select the two correct answers.
(1 point)
Responses
Having the words spoken offstage helps emphasize that even though the play is ending, the struggle for women’s rights will continue.
Having the words spoken offstage helps emphasize that even though the play is ending, the struggle for women’s rights will continue.
Having the words spoken offstage helps emphasize that the struggle for women’s rights did not have a large audience at the time the play is set.
Having the words spoken offstage helps emphasize that the struggle for women’s rights did not have a large audience at the time the play is set.
Rebecca is running late for the meeting. She rushes offstage to catch the next train, which is why the words are spoken from off stage.
Rebecca is running late for the meeting. She rushes offstage to catch the next train, which is why the words are spoken from off stage.
Rebecca represents the younger generation who is ready for change, and won’t wait for her mother, who represents the older generation that will be left behind if they don’t join the struggle.
Rebecca represents the younger generation who is ready for change, and won’t wait for her mother, who represents the older generation that will be left behind if they don’t join the struggle.
Having the words spoken offstage helps emphasize that Rebecca does not care about her mother or what happens to her.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Correct answers:
- Having the words spoken offstage helps emphasize that even though the play is ending, the struggle for women’s rights will continue.
- Rebecca represents the younger generation who is ready for change, and won’t wait for her mother, who represents the older generation that will be left behind if they don’t join the struggle.
Explanation: An offstage voice suggests action continuing beyond the stage (the movement carries on), and Rebecca’s offstage speech signals a younger, forward-looking figure leading that ongoing change.
- Having the words spoken offstage helps emphasize that even though the play is ending, the struggle for women’s rights will continue.
- Rebecca represents the younger generation who is ready for change, and won’t wait for her mother, who represents the older generation that will be left behind if they don’t join the struggle.
Explanation: An offstage voice suggests action continuing beyond the stage (the movement carries on), and Rebecca’s offstage speech signals a younger, forward-looking figure leading that ongoing change.
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