Which оf the fоllоwing would be the most direct exаmple of the “think mаnаger–think male” bias?
Explаin Hаdооp MаpReduce wоrkflow with an example.
Operаtiоns typicаlly invоlve frequent reаding and writing оnce.
ENG 126: Finаl Exаm ReviewPаrt I. Identificatiоn: Yоu are respоnsible for five identification questions. Choose five quotes. Write a complete paragraph for each one you choose. For quotes, identify the writer, the title of the work, and explain the significance. (25 points)“I seen…him…night after night…come in…and look at that rug…and then look at me…the red showing in his eyes…the veins moving in his head…I seen him grow thin and old before he was forty…”“Now, now, my little skylark mustn’t let her wings droop.”“As I learn from you,/I guess you learn from me—/although you’re older—and white—/and somewhat more free.”“A Route of Evanescence/With a revolving Wheel—"“I’ll just imagine he had an operation. The horn was removed to make him less—freakish!”“love you land of the pilgrims’ and so forth oh”“She—come to think of it, she was kind of like a bird herself—real sweet and pretty, but kind of timid and—fluttery.”“…until everything/was rainbow, rainbow, rainbow!”“Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,/But bears it out even to the edge of doom.”“…She had/A heart—how shall I say?—too soon made glad,”“tipping their bellies (round as the thick-/sided glasses whose wash they impound)”“My black face fades,/hiding inside the black granite./I said I wouldn’t,/dammit. No tears.”“O generation of the thoroughly smug/ and thoroughly uncomfortable,”“far and wee” Part II. Short Answer: You are responsible for five questions. For each one, you are expected to supply a short answer. (Typically, the answer is one word or one sentence.) (10 points)Q1. A fourteen-line poem comprised of three quatrains and a concluding couplet that elaborates on a question, idea, or problem is referred to as what type of poem?Q2. Identify the term that describes a poem written as a speech made by a character speaking to a silent listener.Q3. What kind of bird pecked the sisters’ eyes out in Anne Sexton’s “Cinderella”?Q4. What is Laura’s last name in The Glass Menagerie?Q5. What is the name of the dance Nora performs in A Doll’s House? Part III. Essay response: Choose ONE question. Write a clearly organized and thoughtfully argued essay that uses specific examples from three works by three different writers listed on our syllabus this semester. (65 points) Q1. How do three different dramatists stage climactic scenes to amplify a play’s main conflict? Choose three different plays from our assigned readings. Identify a climactic scene in each play. Describe how the main conflict reaches a critical moment in the scene. How does the protagonist’s decision in that moment shape the outcome of the play? How is the pivotal nature of this moment punctuated with either silence or a significant outburst? In what way does the scene underline a vital message in the play? Tie your analysis of the scene to the play’s message, theme, or overarching question. (Possibilities: Susan Glaspell, Henrik Ibsen, Lorraine Hansberry, and Tennessee Williams…) Q2. In many of the poems and plays we have read, female figures emerge to challenge gender stereotypes and the social dictates governing women’s roles. How do three different authors respond to the stereotypes defining the women of their day? Using three different works of literature, identify three female figures that fit this description. Analyze how this female character is poised to confront gender inequality. How does this female character advance the writer’s critique in the poem or play? (Possibilities: Robert Browning, Anne Sexton, Emily Dickinson, Langston Hughes, Henrik Ibsen, Susan Glaspell, Tennessee Williams, Lorraine Hansberry…)Q3. How do three different writers confront racial inequality? Choose three different literary works. Analyze how each author articulates their argument about racial inequality. In the course of your analysis, discuss how specific literary devices amplify the writer’s message. Use clearly explained examples to support your argument. Q4. In Trifles, A Doll’s House, and A Raisin in the Sun, the women carry emotional, social, and economic weight that the men around them overlook. Write an essay analyzing how women characters in each play carry burdens that hold their families together.BONUS QUESTION:What was the last name of the man murdered in the trial Glaspell covered as a reporter?