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GWD-1

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楼主
发表于 2005-1-15 10:51:00 | 只看该作者

GWD-1

The fields of antebellum (pre-Civil


       War) political history and women’s his-


       tory use separate sources and focus


Line      on separate issues.  olitical histori-     


  (5)     ans, 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, mean-


while, have shown little interest in the


subject of party politics, instead draw-


ing 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 signifi-


cance 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 propa-


ganda, 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 con-  


        ferred 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.


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



The answer is E, why c ? how can i get the right answer ?


沙发
发表于 2009-5-10 16:04:00 | 只看该作者
women’s reform activities ,文中并未提及
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