Read the excerpt from "Hokusai's The Great Wave.”So The Great Wave, far from being the quintessence of Japan, is a hybrid work, a fusion of European materials and conventions with a Japanese sensibility. No wonder this image has been so loved in Europe: it is an exotic relative, not a complete stranger.It also, I think, shows a peculiarly Japanese ambivalence. As a viewer, you have no place to stand, no footing. You too must be in a boat, under the Great Wave, and in danger. The dangerous sea over which European things and ideas travelled has, however, been drawn with a profound ambiguity.
Answer
A
The Great Wave was created using European techniques.
B
The Great Wave was created using Japanese materials.
C
The Great Wave represents feelings of contentment in Japanese culture.
D
The Great Wave represents feelings of ambivalence in Japanese culture.