Soru

Zorluk: ZorAbolitionism and the Women's Rights Movement

Read the excerpt below.

"What if I am a woman? Is not my soul as precious in the sight of God as yours? Did the man who died on Calvary die for white men only? Or did he not die for the whole human family? ... I am a true-born American; your blood flows in my veins, and yours in mine. ... O, ye daughters of Africa, awake! awake! arise! no longer sleep nor slumber, but distinguish yourselves. Show to the world as in days of yore, that it has been your ambition so to do."
— Maria W. Stewart, address at Franklin Hall, Boston, 1832

The public activism of the author of this excerpt most directly challenged prevailing social norms of the early nineteenth century in which of the following ways?

  1. A
    She advocated for the voluntary colonization of free Black Americans in Africa, opposing the assimilationist views of most reformers.
  2. B
    She formed the first organized female labor unions, connecting the abolitionist movement directly to northern industrial strikes.
  3. She delivered public lectures to mixed-gender audiences, defying the era's cultural restrictions on women's public speech.Cevap
  4. D
    She organized a petition campaign for a federal constitutional amendment to secure women's suffrage, bypassing local state legislatures.

Cevap

She delivered public lectures to mixed-gender audiences, defying the era's cultural restrictions on women's public speech.
The correct answer is correct because Maria W. Stewart's decision to speak publicly before a mixed-gender audience of both men and women (historically referred to as a 'promiscuous audience') directly violated the gender norms of the early nineteenth century. Under the prevailing ideology of 'separate spheres,' women were expected to limit their activities to the domestic and private realms and were socially prohibited from public political speaking.

Adım Adım Çözüm

1
Analyze the author, date, and core message of the primary source.
The text is an 1832 address by Maria W. Stewart, a pioneering African American female reformer speaking in Boston on spiritual equality, abolition, and women's rights.
Identifying the author and context helps locate the question within the religious and social reform movements of the Second Great Awakening.
2
Assess the prevailing social and cultural norms governing gender roles in the early 1830s.
The cultural norm of 'separate spheres' restricted middle-class and reformer women to domestic settings and forbade them from speaking publicly to mixed-gender audiences.
This establishes the historical baseline of gender restrictions that the reformer's actions would be measured against.
3
Evaluate the provided options to determine which one reflects a direct challenge to those gender norms in the 1830s.
Stewart's public address before a mixed-gender audience of both men and women directly violated the social prohibitions against women's public political speech.
This aligns the primary source's historical action with the specific subversion of nineteenth-century gender expectations.

Anahtar Kavram

The intersection of religious revivalism, abolitionism, and early women's rights advocacy in challenging early nineteenth-century gender roles and separate spheres.
Bu soruyu puanla