The panic touched off by Orson Welles’s 1938 radio broadcast of the science-fiction classic War of the Worlds has often been the ascribed to the lingering anxieties of the Depression era and apprehension about the a second world war; political and economic unease supposedly made people psychologically prepared to believe that Earth had been invaded by Martians.
- Panic has often been the ascribed to the lingering anxieties of the Depression era and apprehension about the a second world war;
would most seriously weaken the attempt above to explain the panic ??
We need to find the option that explains that the panic was not caused by lingering anxieties of the Depression era and apprehension about the a second world war;
Option B does this.
(B) Rebroadcasts of Welles's War of the Worlds during times of peace and economic optimism have on occasion resulted in similar panics.
The panics were indeed caused by Welles broadcasts of war of the worlds.
- Panic has often been the ascribed to the lingering anxieties of the Depression era and apprehension about the a second world war;
would most seriously weaken the attempt above to explain the panic ??
We need to find the option that explains that the panic was not caused by lingering anxieties of the Depression era and apprehension about the a second world war;
Option B does this.
(B) Rebroadcasts of Welles's War of the Worlds during times of peace and economic optimism have on occasion resulted in similar panics.
The panics were indeed caused by Welles broadcasts of war of the worlds.
Statistics : Posted by birkin1990 • on 11 Mar 2024, 17:02 • Replies 1 • Views 556




