Wu Ting
How would you interpret ‘make the case for’? Pilgrims of Chapultepec (Stratford and Sons), set in Mexico before the Conquest, recounts a pilgrimage of people cast out from home, doomed to follow a neurotic leader who picks fights with his own shadow. Shepherd (the author) makes the case for those who find themselves on the ropes against bad policy, wondering what the Sam Hill their leader could be thinking. The protagonist, a boy named Poatlicue, struggles to be a model citizen but comes to view his nation’s long march as a winning game for the king, and the scourge of everyone else. How would you interpret ‘make the case for’ in the sentence: Shepherd (the author) makes the case for those who find themselves on the ropes against bad policy…? Does it mean the author wanted to criticize the social situation through his story? Thanks!
Feb 27, 2015 1:50 AM
Answers · 6
2
If you make the case for someone or something, you provide support for their point of view or struggle. Shepherd takes the side of those who are struggling with the bad decisions of their leader.
February 27, 2015
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