The following description is about this advertisement.
1. Does "which" refer to "whole"?
2. Does "for which" mean "as in Romantic art one of the defining characteristics is..." or "as in this advertisement one of the defining characteristics is..."?
Context:
Other instances of similarly defamiliarising interruptions to the narrative flow include: static views of the same man’s weather-beaten face that appeared in negative halfway through; the interior of a telescopic laboratory; and the momentary slowing down of the explosion of a house.
Yet these remain details within the whole, which is directed in terms of mood as much as in terms of narrative structure. Here, again, parallels can be drawn with Romantic art, for which one of the defining characteristics is the orchestration of mood. From the start, the viewer’s experience is constructed in epic terms: the commercial opens with two foreboding landscapes that tap into the popular fallacy that nature reflects human emotion (more anthropomorphism) and create a sense of premonition through vast, dramatically lit skies.
catttt 1. Does "which" refer to "whole"? Yes.
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catttt1. Does "which" refer to "whole"?
Yes.
catttt2. Does "for which" mean "as in Romantic art one of the defining characteristics is..." or "as in this advertisement one of the defining characteristics is..."?
The antecedent of "which" is "Romantic art": "parallels can be drawn with Romantic art. F
catttt1. Does "which" refer to "whole"?
"the whole" - the entirety of the art work
catttt2. Does "for which" mean
One of the defining characteristics of Romantic art is the orchestration of mood.