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Read the excerpt from Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy.

Reverend Buckminster sighed. "It doesn't matter if it's true. It matters what people think. It matters that my congregation can tell me what to think when my son goes out to visit a Negro girl on Malaga Island. It doesn't matter at all how she got you out there."

"It matters to me," Turner whispered.

"Speak up!"

"It matters to me."

In this excerpt, the reader is able to see how important Lizzie’s friendship is to Turner. Which explains the factor that is most likely affecting Turner’s perspective in this excerpt?

Turner’s age is not allowing him to fully understand his father’s concerns over the racial conflict.
Turner’s location is not allowing him to see that racial conflict can occur anywhere.
Turner’s morals are not allowing him to take part in the racial conflict that is occurring.
Turner’s limited education is not allowing him to understand exactly what racial conflict is.

Respuesta :

Turner’s age is not allowing him to fully understand his father’s concerns over the racial conflict.

Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy

  • Lizzie Bright Griffin became friends with Turner Buckminster, a minister's son.
  • The neighborhood and his father did not approve of their friendship as it developed. She comes from a poor island town, so this makes sense.
  • They eventually realized that the island where Lizzie lives was being targeted for conversion into a tourist destination, and as a result, its residents were being asked to leave.
  • Turner, however, lacks the maturity to comprehend that.

Hence, Turner cannot fully comprehend his father's worries about the race war because of his age.

To learn more about Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy refer to:

https://brainly.com/question/16986327

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