While writers such as Ernest Hemingway and Sinclair Lewis criticized what they saw as American hypocrisy in the 1920s, the truth was
A) that they hated American culture and the changes they saw.
B) they thought the country was beyond reform.
C) they were diehard Americans at heart who wanted to create a more authentic culture.
D) they were bitter about the impact of mass printing on sales of their books.
E) All of these choices
C
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Native Americans continued to remain outsiders in the postwar years
Indicate whether the statement is true or false.
How did these contrasting images from the early 1990s of a starving Somali woman and her child and of Somali rebels dragging the corpse of an American soldier through the streets of Mogadishu, Somalia, impact the American public's perception of African nations like Somalia?
A) Both images caused the United States to appeal to the United Nations to send aid and peacekeeping forces to Somalia. B) Both images convinced President Clinton to submit to the public demand of withdrawing American troops from Somalia. C) Both images encouraged Americans to view African nations as dysfunctional places where famine and fighting were endemic. D) Both images rallied popular support for aiding the poor in East Africa, prompting President George H. W. Bush to send American troops to Somalia.
Which of the following was true of churches in the pre-Civil War South?
A) They were run by state governments. B) Many had biracial congregations. C) None accepted black people as congregants. D) They all had integrated seating.
Who was John Calvin and what did he believe?
What will be an ideal response?