Which statement best compares young Jeannie and Woody when the Wakatsukis first arrive at the internment camp in Farewell to Manzanar?

Responses

Both try to be upbeat and positive amid the hardship they face.
Both try to be upbeat and positive amid the hardship they face.

Both take out their anger at their situation on other members of their family.
Both take out their anger at their situation on other members of their family.

Both express their disgust at the humiliating conditions in the camp.
Both express their disgust at the humiliating conditions in the camp.

Both let their frustration cause them to lose their tempers.

1 answer

The statement that best compares young Jeannie and Woody when the Wakatsukis first arrive at the internment camp in "Farewell to Manzanar" is:

Both express their disgust at the humiliating conditions in the camp.

This reflects their shared feelings about the situation they find themselves in as they cope with the difficult realities of internment.