Choose one character from the story "The call of the wild" and explain how the author created him or her. Share at least three elements of characterization and give examples of each for your chosen character. Your response should address each part of the question use details from the book to support each description.

I choosed Buck!!

Can someone actually help me answer the questions I rlly need help please...I choose buck for my character I don’t remember everything tho...

can someone literally just type this out? i’m failing and need the credit. ms sue stay out of it. xoxo thx.

Could someone just type this out for me i need the credit buck is my character and i have to get this done. ive been in a really dark place and its been hard to stay motivated. and as for ms sue bby im not even here... im a hallucination

Thank you for that but isn’t that just the summary of the book???

But yea ‘really’ is right ngl, I gonna stop coming to this or any other site once the semester ends because I need to start doing all of these things on my own because this is honestly sad

I think it is just a summary.

Same, I really need to do everything by my self

Frr I am too

Omg just give the answer

This is my answer please rewrite it in your own words or you will get no points!!!

The story of Buck has a cyclical structure: he emerges from being a pampered prince to becoming a veritable king of beasts by the end of the book. Buck experiences a variety of experiences in between that allow him to gain a greater understanding of the world. The spoiled regent Buck starts off proudly strutting across his sun-kissed kingdom, but everything is suddenly taken away from him. As a result, he is beaten and kicked, and compelled to pull sleds through the Canadian wilderness. Rather than destroy him, this experience makes him stronger, and he regains his kingdom-or rather, he wins a new one that better suits his true destiny as a wild animal. As its title suggests, The Call of the Wild celebrates wildness, primitive life, and even savagery. As Buck climbed the ladder to greatness, he faced obstacles along the way, from Hal's folly to the folly of Mercedes and Charles. But these obstacles, London advises, are to rejoiced rather than avoided: life is ultimately an overlong struggle for command, and the greatest dogs (or men), the Bucks of the earth, will consistently seek out struggles to expose their greatness. Therefore, when Buck goes from being a righteous, civilized pet to a ferocious, bloodthirsty, violent wolf-dog, we're pleased instead of petrified, because we know that he's fulfilling his highest -possible fate.

I mean, the question is really simple but it'd be nice if we didn't have to write it out :D

i fELl iN LOvE wITh aN eMO giRL