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History 11 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

someone good at reading?

OpenStudy (studytheworld):

I would say I'm pretty good at reading. What's up?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I'm here as well, what do you need to read

OpenStudy (anonymous):

alright here it is

OpenStudy (anonymous):

What key phrases from the Rosen article are helpful for understanding the topics? Intentional social connecting, human relations. Intermediate acquaintance, conventional wisdom. Opportunity costs, social networking sites. Unspoken rules, online social networks.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Once you have a basic idea about the topic of the article, it’s time to look for more key information to see whether you are right. Let’s start with key words. It’s a great practice to analyze the title of a text to come up with questions that will help you locate key words as you read. When you analyzed the title of this article, you found two possible topics. Let’s turn them into questions: Is this an article about online communication and social media? Is this an article about how narcissism is a new idea? Using these questions, you can discover information that helps you better understand what you are reading. As you closely reread this article, look for answers to these questions and take notes on your graphic organizer. For centuries, the rich and the powerful documented their existence and their status through painted portraits. A marker of wealth and a bid for immortality, portraits offer intriguing hints about the daily life of their subjects — professions, ambitions, attitudes, and, most importantly, social standing. Such portraits, as German art historian Hans Belting has argued, can be understood as “painted anthropology,” with much to teach us, both intentionally and unintentionally, about the culture in which they were created.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

The key words in this paragraph tell you two important things: People have been narcissistic since long before the Internet. Social standing has been important to people for many years. For centuries, the rich and the powerful documented their existence and their status through painted portraits. A marker of wealth and a bid for immortality, portraits offer intriguing hints about the daily life of their subjects — professions, ambitions, attitudes, and, most importantly, social standing. Such portraits, as German art historian Hans Belting has argued, can be understood as “painted anthropology,” with much to teach us, both intentionally and unintentionally, about the culture in which they were created.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

RELATION AND DETAILS

OpenStudy (anonymous):

so it would be A right

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