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OG RC #81

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shubhamkumar Rising GMAT Star Default Avatar
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OG RC #81 Post Sun Mar 18, 2012 9:47 pm
Elapsed Time: 00:00
  • Lap #[LAPCOUNT] ([LAPTIME])
    Two works published in 1984 demonstrate
    contrasting approaches to writing the history of
    United States women. Buel and Buel’s biography of
    Mary Fish (1736-1818) makes little effort to place
    her story in the context of recent historiography on
    women. Lebsock, meanwhile, attempts not only to
    write the history of women in one southern
    community, but also to redirect two decades of
    historiographical debate as to whether women
    gained or lost status in the nineteenth century as
    compared with the eighteenth century. Although
    both books offer the reader the opportunity to
    assess this controversy regarding women’s status,
    only Lebsock’s deals with it directly. She examines
    several different aspects of women’s status, helping
    to refi ne and resolve the issues. She concludes that
    while women gained autonomy in some areas,
    especially in the private sphere, they lost it in many
    aspects of the economic sphere. More importantly,
    she shows that the debate itself depends on frame
    of reference: in many respects, women lost power
    in relation to men, for example, as certain jobs
    (delivering babies, supervising schools) were taken
    over by men. Yet women also gained power in
    comparison with their previous status, owning a
    higher proportion of real estate, for example. In
    contrast, Buel and Buel’s biography provides ample
    raw material for questioning the myth, fostered by
    some historians, of a colonial golden age in the
    eighteenth century but does not give the reader
    much guidance in analyzing the controversy over
    women’s status.

    81.The passage suggests that Buel and Buel's biography of Mary Fish
    provides evidence of which of the following views of women's history?

    A.Women have lost power in relation to men in the colonial era.
    B.Women of the colonial era were not as likely to be concerned as
    were women in the nineteenth century.
    C.The colonial era was not as favorable for women as some historians have believed.
    D.Women had more economic autonomy in the colonial era than in the nineteenth century.
    E.Womens occupation were more respected in the colonial era than in the nineteenth century.


    The OA states that the passage suggests the colonial age was not favorable to women
    from the lines " Buel and Buel’s biography provides ample
    raw material for questioning the myth, fostered by
    some historians, of a colonial golden age in the
    eighteenth century "

    I could not find infer from this or anywhere else in the passage about 18th century as less favorable.The passage does state about differences,but does not explicitly state which century's women lived in less favorable conditions.

    OA: C

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    Post Mon Mar 19, 2012 8:57 pm
    Hi Subham,

    Quote:
    Buel and Buel’s biography provides ample raw material for questioning the myth of a colonial golden age in the eighteenth century.
    We need to focus on “the myth of a colonial golden age “ . It means colonial golden age was myth and not true. It is saying that colonial golden age was not as good as historians believed. It is a restatement of option C.

    HTH.

    Thanked by: shubhamkumar

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