Chapter 4 Portuguese - first to begin slave trade slaves‚ manufactured goods were traded for rice‚ sugar‚ tobacco; taken back to Europe and were sold then traded again for manufactured goods Society with slaves - part of labor force were slaves Slave society - majority of laborers are slaves About 300 slaves on a ship‚ 1 in 6 died Bodies thrown overboard Middle Passage - brutal journey from africa to america Auctions losing independence because more are being brought Slaves costed twice
Premium Slavery British Empire
How does Barker convey Burns’ experience/regeneration in Chapter 4? The extract opens with Burns standing by the window‚ looking out on a bleak and depressing landscape‚ “sky and hills together in a wash of grey.” The pathetic fallacy reflects on Burns’ mood; downcast‚ depressed. He feels the need to escape; but is trapped. A sense of darkness and connotations of conflict seem to surround him‚ both outside‚ in the form of the stormy weather‚ and inside the hospital in the form of the crowded room
Premium Fear
Chapter 4: Slavery‚ Freedom‚ and the Struggle for Empire‚ to 1763 I. Olaudah Equiano II. Slavery and the Empire A. The Triangular Trades 1. A series of triangular trade routes crisscrossed the Atlantic. 2. Colonial merchants all profited from the slave trade. 3. Slavery became connected with the color black and liberty with the color white. B. Africa and the Slave Trade 1. With the exception of the king of Benin‚ most African rulers took part in the slave trade‚ gaining guns and textiles
Premium Slavery Slavery in the United States Atlantic slave trade
"American Holocaust" by David E Stannard was first published and distributed in 1992‚ the same year that celebrated the quincentenary of the discovery of America by Christopher Columbus. The release date would not have been decided upon by happenchance‚ but would have been part of a well thought out marketing strategy to take best advantage of the five hundredth anniversary of American ’civilisation ’. The book is highly controversial in its choice of theme‚ in that it shows the American people
Premium Native Americans in the United States
Chapter #8 - Case Study The Looming Threat of Cyberwarfare 1. Question – Cyberwarfare is a serious problem Answer: because cyberwarfare is more complex than conventional warfare. Cyberwarfare is Internet based conflict that involves political motivated attacks on information systems. Cyberwarfare attacks are disabling financial systems and communication networks. This is a serious problem because the potential targets for these attacks are military power grids but this cyberwarfare is targeting
Premium United States Attack Federal government of the United States
Nutrition Study Guide‚ Chapters 3-4 Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. __E__ 1. How would you respond to someone who states that white bread is just as nutritious as whole-wheat bread? a. | White bread is just as nutritious because it has been enriched with iron‚ niacin‚ riboflavin‚ thiamin‚ and folate. | b. | Whole-wheat bread is preferable because it is likely to contain several nutrients not added to white bread. | c. |
Premium Nutrition Food Maize
Chapter Four! Greece and Iran 1000 – 30 B.C.E. ⅠAncient Iran 1000 - 500 B.C.E • Also known as the Persian Empire. • Little written materials are left. A. Geography and Resources • Northwest Iran was more open to attacks by the nomads of Central Asia. • Irrigation in the first millennium B.C.E. enabled people to move to open plains so they could plant. • Under ground irrigation channels. • Human survival depended on a delicate ecological balance. B. the Rise of the Persian Empire • “Iranians”
Premium Ancient Greece Sparta Alexander the Great
operational inefficiency. intangible benefits: There might be promotion of organizational learning and understanding‚ because they were in the project to learn. There might be improved processing efficiency‚ because they know the procedures more better.4.ANS: We think it might be a high-risk project since the project size and structure are pretty large‚ and the user group don’t seem very familiar with the development process. Since larger projects and little familiarity cause higher risks‚ We justify
Premium Project management Project planning
Juvenile Justice Chapters 1-4 1 Juvenile violence is generally unrelated to gang formation and presence. False 2 The actual amount of juvenile violence in the United States is unknown. True 3 Property-offender juveniles account for about 10% of all juvenile arrests annually. False 4 A policy of delaying juvenile punishments works best for juvenile rehabilitation. False 5 Juvenile courts are the same as criminal courts. False 6 Juvenile courts have prosecutors and other court personnel
Premium Crime Juvenile delinquency
Yugoslavia. 3. Supranationalism c. This is important because it is a method of decision making in a multi-national community. Supranationalist groups tie together countries or regions to make trade and money transference easier. (ex: EU) 4. State Shapes (Compact‚ Elongated‚ Prorupt‚ Fragmented‚ Perforated) d. The different shapes of states are important because each shape has certain benefits and disabilities‚ some more severe than others. For example‚ elongated states‚ like Chile
Premium Sovereign state State Government