Welcome! Check out our free B-School Guides to learn how you compare with other applicants.
Login or Register
 

G-PreRC passage: The identification of femininity with moral

This topic has 2 member replies
sandeepgupta01@gmail.com Really wants to Beat The GMAT! Default Avatar
Joined
30 Apr 2010
Posted:
106 messages
Followed by:
37 members
Thanked:
30 times
GMAT Score:
800
G-PreRC passage: The identification of femininity with moral Post Wed Dec 21, 2011 12:18 am
Elapsed Time: 00:00
  • Lap #[LAPCOUNT] ([LAPTIME])
    GMAT-Prep RC: Final solution at one place:

    The identification of femininity with morality and a belief in the innate moral superiority of women were fundamental to the cult of female domesticity in the nineteenth-century United States. Ironically, this ideology of female benevolence empowered women in the realm of social activism, enabling them to escape the confines of their traditional domestic spheres and to enter prisons, hospitals, battlefields, and slums. By following this path, some women came to wield considerable authority in the distribution of resources and services in their communities.
    The sentimentalized concept of female benevolence bore little resemblance to women's actual work, which was decidedly unsentimental and businesslike, in that it involved chartering societies, raising money, and paying salaries. Moreover, in the face of legal limitations on their right to control money and property, women had to find ingenious legal ways to run and finance organized philanthropy. In contrast to the day-to-day reality of this work, the idealized image of female benevolence lent a sentimental and gracious aura of altruism to the very real authority and privilege that some women commanded-which explains why some women activists clung tenaciously to this ideology. But clinging to this ideology also prevented these women from even attempting to gain true political power because it implied a moral purity that precluded participation in the messy world of partisan politics.

    Which of the following best summarizes the main point of the passage?
    (A) The identification of femininity with morality promoted the notion of women's moral purity while excluding women from positions of authority in their communities.
    (B) The belief in women's innate moral superiority allowed women to exercise political power without participating in partisan politics.
    (C) The cult of female domesticity helped some women to gain power and privilege but kept most women confined to the domestic sphere.
    (D) The ideology of female benevolence empowered women in the realm of social activism but placed limits on their direct political power.
    (E) The idealization of female altruism enabled women to engage in philanthropic activities but prevented them from managing money and property.

    Key Takeaways from the passage..
    1. The author does not provide an opinion
    2. The author merely states facts on how the cult of female domesticity led to women’s influence on non-domestic spheres as well
    3. The only realm that was out of reach for women was partisan politics

    As mentioned in the “takeaways” above, the author wants to illustrate that women started to gain power socially but did not enter the realm of politics. Hence option (D) is the right answer.

    _________________
    Sandeep Gupta,
    Director, Ivy-GMAT
    Bangalore, India
    http://ivy-gmat.blogspot.com
    GMAT Scores: 800, 770. Minimum Quant: 51; Minimum Verbal: 45 (99th percentile)

    Need free GMAT or MBA advice from an expert? Register for Beat The GMAT now and post your question in these forums!
    fangtray Really wants to Beat The GMAT! Default Avatar
    Joined
    08 Sep 2011
    Posted:
    273 messages
    Followed by:
    3 members
    Thanked:
    4 times
    Post Wed Apr 04, 2012 4:37 pm
    sandeepgupta01@gmail.com wrote:
    GMAT-Prep RC: Final solution at one place:

    The identification of femininity with morality and a belief in the innate moral superiority of women were fundamental to the cult of female domesticity in the nineteenth-century United States. Ironically, this ideology of female benevolence empowered women in the realm of social activism, enabling them to escape the confines of their traditional domestic spheres and to enter prisons, hospitals, battlefields, and slums. By following this path, some women came to wield considerable authority in the distribution of resources and services in their communities.
    The sentimentalized concept of female benevolence bore little resemblance to women's actual work, which was decidedly unsentimental and businesslike, in that it involved chartering societies, raising money, and paying salaries. Moreover, in the face of legal limitations on their right to control money and property, women had to find ingenious legal ways to run and finance organized philanthropy. In contrast to the day-to-day reality of this work, the idealized image of female benevolence lent a sentimental and gracious aura of altruism to the very real authority and privilege that some women commanded-which explains why some women activists clung tenaciously to this ideology. But clinging to this ideology also prevented these women from even attempting to gain true political power because it implied a moral purity that precluded participation in the messy world of partisan politics.

    Which of the following best summarizes the main point of the passage?
    (A) The identification of femininity with morality promoted the notion of women's moral purity while excluding women from positions of authority in their communities.
    (B) The belief in women's innate moral superiority allowed women to exercise political power without participating in partisan politics.
    (C) The cult of female domesticity helped some women to gain power and privilege but kept most women confined to the domestic sphere.
    (D) The ideology of female benevolence empowered women in the realm of social activism but placed limits on their direct political power.
    (E) The idealization of female altruism enabled women to engage in philanthropic activities but prevented them from managing money and property.

    Key Takeaways from the passage..
    1. The author does not provide an opinion
    2. The author merely states facts on how the cult of female domesticity led to women’s influence on non-domestic spheres as well
    3. The only realm that was out of reach for women was partisan politics

    As mentioned in the “takeaways” above, the author wants to illustrate that women started to gain power socially but did not enter the realm of politics. Hence option (D) is the right answer.
    restarting an old thread. I got this wrong on the gmat prep exam i recently took. I felt this short passage was incredibly difficult to understand. Although it is short, it uses difficult language to grasp in an anxiety-filled and timed setting. Do any experts have an opinion on the level of difficulty of this passage? perhaps it is just difficult for me but is actually an easy passage.

    Anyways.. I chose A for this one... the OA is D.. But I feel D is one of those half right half wrong answers.. for example, "the ideology of femane benevolence empowered women in the realm of social activism" is a direct copy from the passage, so it is true, but the 2nd part "placed limits on their direct political power" i feel is untrue. At the end of the passage, it states that the ideology "prevented these women from even attempting to gain true political power", so i took it to mean that they did not get anywhere in politics, not just "placing limits". Furthermore, the mention of politics is ONLY in the last sentence of the entire article, surely that cannot be part of the Main PT of the passage can it?

    Could an expert also help me with why A is wrong?

    amit.trivedi@ymail.com GMAT Destroyer!
    Joined
    09 Nov 2010
    Posted:
    934 messages
    Followed by:
    14 members
    Thanked:
    59 times
    Test Date:
    N.A
    Target GMAT Score:
    750
    Post Sun Apr 08, 2012 12:06 am
    Which of the following best summarizes the main point of the passage?
    (A) The identification of femininity with morality promoted the notion of women's moral purity while excluding women from positions of authority in their communities.
    (B) The belief in women's innate moral superiority allowed women to exercise political power without participating in partisan politics.
    (C) The cult of female domesticity helped some women to gain power and privilege but kept most women confined to the domestic sphere.
    (D) The ideology of female benevolence empowered women in the realm of social activism but placed limits on their direct political power.
    (E) The idealization of female altruism enabled women to engage in philanthropic activities but prevented them from managing money and property.


    Well let me tell you guyzzz that option A is a mixed up option. This is an inference question and remember that in an inference question, you have to choose the answer choice that is explicitly stated and not just assumed.
    So in this question you cannot assume anything or even take nothing from outside. Be specific to what is given.

    Option A: The passage specifically says that women entered the authoritative position and where they could take the places of paying salaries, take up charters etc.

    It is nowhere given in the passage that women could not take many positions.\

    It is only mentioned that women could not take up political power.

    I hope my post really helped you fangtray...

    _________________
    IT IS TIME TO BEAT THE GMAT

    LEARNING, APPLICATION AND TIMING IS THE FACT OF GMAT AND LIFE AS WELL... KEEP PLAYING!!!

    Whenever you feel that my post really helped you to learn something new, please press on the 'THANK' button.

    Best Conversation Starters

    1 varun289 40 topics
    2 guerrero 21 topics
    3 sana.noor 20 topics
    4 killerdrummer 19 topics
    5 sanaa.rizwan 14 topics
    See More Top Beat The GMAT Members...

    Most Active Experts

    1 image description Brent@GMATPrepNow

    GMAT Prep Now Teacher

    203 posts
    2 image description GMATGuruNY

    The Princeton Review Teacher

    140 posts
    3 image description Jim@StratusPrep

    Stratus Prep

    100 posts
    4 image description Anju@Gurome

    Gurome

    99 posts
    5 image description Jon@Admissionado

    Admissionado

    49 posts
    See More Top Beat The GMAT Experts