Respuesta :
The right answer is this: Fathers are used to having total authority over choosing their children's spouses. Nene's fiancé is arguing that getting married, of their own free will, will make his family, who live in a rural area, unhappy, since they haven't arranged the marriage, and that's what Ibo fathers traditionally do. To make matters worse, the bride and the groom belong to different tribes. Although Nene is surprised, since, on the one hand, she is used to live in a populous, cosmopolitan, and multicultural city, and, on the other hand, she finds it difficult and mocking to believe that a person’s tribe may determine whom he or she marries, and she has always thought that Igbos are amicable and agreeable, her fiancé reminds her that if her father, an Ibibio, was still alive and lived not in the city but "in the heart of Ibibio-land," he would have exactly the same expectations to arrange her marriage. The passage, therefore, confirms that fathers in Nigerian rural society have total authority over choosing their children's spouses.
Fathers are used to having total authority over choosing their children's spouses. This is the correct option.
This is what the male character,Nnaemeka, tells his fiancee, Nene, when he says that in matters of marraige fathers choose their children's spouses. In fact, he makes a supposition: if her father had lived in a rural area, he would have done the same with her.
These options are not right:
-The idea of arranged marriage has become "something of a joke." ( This is possible in a city but not in rural areas).
-Intermarriage is allowed because the Ibos are "kindly disposed to other people. ( The Ibos are willing to be with other people but in matters of marriage they are rigid. They will not allow an Ibo to marry a person from another etnia).
-Ibo fathers have traditionally married off their children to non-Ibos. ( In fact, it is just the opposite; they want their children to marry Ibos).