Antebellum

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Antebellum

by getso » Thu Apr 29, 2010 8:57 am
The fields of antebellum (pre-Civil
War) political history and women's history
use separate sources and focus
Line on separate issues. Political historians
(5) , examining sources such as voting
records, newspapers, and politicians'
writings, focus on the emergence in the
1840's of a new "American political
nation," and since women were neither
(10) voters nor politicians, they receive little
discussion. Women's historians, meanwhile,
have shown little interest in the
subject of party politics, instead drawing
on personal papers, legal records
(15) such as wills, and records of female
associations to illuminate women's
domestic lives, their moral reform
activities, and the emergence of the
woman's rights movement.
(20) However, most historians have
underestimated the extent and significance
of women's political allegiance
in the antebellum period. For example,
in the presidential election campaigns
(25) of the 1840's, the Virginia Whig party
strove to win the allegiance of Virginia's
women by inviting them to rallies and
speeches. According to Whig propaganda,
women who turned out at the
(30) party's rallies gathered information
that enabled them to mold party-loyal
families, reminded men of moral values
that transcended party loyalty, and conferred
moral standing on the party.
(35) Virginia Democrats, in response,
began to make similar appeals to
women as well. By the mid-1850's
the inclusion of women in the rituals of
party politics had become common-
(40) place, and the ideology that justified
such inclusion had been assimilated
by the Democrats.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q4:
The primary purpose of the passage as a whole is to
A. examine the tactics of antebellum political parties with regard to women
B. trace the effect of politics on the emergence of the woman's rights movement
C. point out a deficiency in the study of a particular historical period
D. discuss the ideologies of opposing antebellum political parties
E. contrast the methodologies in two differing fields of historical inquiry
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q5:
According to the second paragraph of the passage (lines 20-42), Whig propaganda
included the assertion that
A. women should enjoy more political rights than they did
B. women were the most important influences on political attitudes within a family
C. women's reform activities reminded men of important moral values
D. women's demonstrations at rallies would influence men's voting behavior
E. women's presence at rallies would enhance the moral standing of the party
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q6:
According to the passage, which of the following was true of Virginia Democrats in the
mid-1850's?
A. They feared that their party was losing its strong moral foundation.
B. They believed that the Whigs' inclusion of women in party politics had led to the
Whigs' success in many elections.
C. They created an ideology that justified the inclusion of women in party politics.
D. They wanted to demonstrate that they were in support of the woman's rights
movement.
E. They imitated the Whigs' efforts to include women in the rituals of party politics

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by FightWithGMAT » Thu Apr 29, 2010 11:21 am
IMO
C
E
C

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by bleedthegmat » Thu Apr 29, 2010 11:15 pm
getso wrote:The fields of antebellum (pre-Civil
War) political history and women's history
use separate sources and focus
Line on separate issues. Political historians
(5) , examining sources such as voting
records, newspapers, and politicians'
writings, focus on the emergence in the
1840's of a new "American political
nation," and since women were neither
(10) voters nor politicians, they receive little
discussion. Women's historians, meanwhile,
have shown little interest in the
subject of party politics, instead drawing
on personal papers, legal records
(15) such as wills, and records of female
associations to illuminate women's
domestic lives, their moral reform
activities, and the emergence of the
woman's rights movement.
(20) However, most historians have
underestimated the extent and significance
of women's political allegiance
in the antebellum period. For example,
in the presidential election campaigns
(25) of the 1840's, the Virginia Whig party
strove to win the allegiance of Virginia's
women by inviting them to rallies and
speeches. According to Whig propaganda,
women who turned out at the
(30) party's rallies gathered information
that enabled them to mold party-loyal
families, reminded men of moral values
that transcended party loyalty, and conferred
moral standing on the party.
(35) Virginia Democrats, in response,
began to make similar appeals to
women as well. By the mid-1850's
the inclusion of women in the rituals of
party politics had become common-
(40) place, and the ideology that justified
such inclusion had been assimilated
by the Democrats.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q4:
The primary purpose of the passage as a whole is to
A. examine the tactics of antebellum political parties with regard to women
B. trace the effect of politics on the emergence of the woman's rights movement
C. point out a deficiency in the study of a particular historical period
D. discuss the ideologies of opposing antebellum political parties
E. contrast the methodologies in two differing fields of historical inquiry
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q5:
According to the second paragraph of the passage (lines 20-42), Whig propaganda
included the assertion that
A. women should enjoy more political rights than they did
B. women were the most important influences on political attitudes within a family
C. women's reform activities reminded men of important moral values
D. women's demonstrations at rallies would influence men's voting behavior
E. women's presence at rallies would enhance the moral standing of the party
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q6:
According to the passage, which of the following was true of Virginia Democrats in the
mid-1850's?
A. They feared that their party was losing its strong moral foundation.
B. They believed that the Whigs' inclusion of women in party politics had led to the
Whigs' success in many elections.
C. They created an ideology that justified the inclusion of women in party politics.
D. They wanted to demonstrate that they were in support of the woman's rights
movement.
E. They imitated the Whigs' efforts to include women in the rituals of party politics
IMO C,D, C

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by susantaiitk » Sat May 01, 2010 5:24 am
My line of thought:

Q4:
The primary purpose of the passage as a whole is to
A. examine the tactics of antebellum political parties with regard to women - political tactics is cites to show woman involvement but not the theme
B. trace the effect of politics on the emergence of the woman’s rights movement - women's rights movement is not here
C. point out a deficiency in the study of a particular historical period - This has to be the answer since author shows women were involved in politics in that period
D. discuss the ideologies of opposing antebellum political parties - ideologies of opposing is not discussed
E. contrast the methodologies in two differing fields of historical inquiry - there are no contrast as such.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q5:
According to the second paragraph of the passage (lines 20-42), Whig propaganda
included the assertion that
A. women should enjoy more political rights than they did - Whig propaganda was not concerned with giving more rights to women
B. women were the most important influences on political attitudes within a family - this might be true but not stated
C. women’s reform activities reminded men of important moral values - this is a part of what is said that moral values transcend party loyalty
D. women’s demonstrations at rallies would influence men’s voting behavior - this should be the assertion behind Whig propaganda
E. women’s presence at rallies would enhance the moral standing of the party - moral stand of the men is changed and not the party
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q6:
According to the passage, which of the following was true of Virginia Democrats in the
mid-1850’s?
A. They feared that their party was losing its strong moral foundation. - not stated
B. They believed that the Whigs’ inclusion of women in party politics had led to the
Whigs’ success in many elections. - passage doesn't say women were there in the party, Whig appealed to women in general
C. They created an ideology that justified the inclusion of women in party politics. - this should be the answer
D. They wanted to demonstrate that they were in support of the woman’s rights
movement. - not stated
E. They imitated the Whigs’ efforts to include women in the rituals of party politics - what they imitated is to address women like Whig ... whether Whig included women in party is not stated. it is the Democrats who started this and understood the reason behind this

Please feel free to correct me.