It can be (i)____________ to read Margaret Fuller's travel writing, as she produced accounts of her travel that (ii)____________ conventions of bourgeois travel narrative, often capitulating to the most well-worn clichés of the genre at precisely the moments when she sought most energetically to cast them off in favor of some new, more passionate mode of discernment. A. frustrating B. challenged C. enlightening D. conformed to E. exciting F. established