What was the "cult of true womanhood?"
a. Social standards that emphasized piety, purity, domesticity, and submissiveness
b. An idea that challenged the notion of separate spheres
c. A radical religious group that advocated spiritual equality and sexual abstinence
d. A widely read poem that explained the role of women in a democratic society
a. Social standards that emphasized piety, purity, domesticity, and submissiveness
You might also like to view...
Mao Zedong’s New Democracy
A. was designed to expel the Turkic population from western China. B. moved slowly, at first, in order not to alienate the peasants. C. gave private land to five percent of peasant families, to increase collectivization. D. was patterned on Stalin’s “Open Society” plan. E. was modeled upon that found in France during the “Terror.”
By 1900, advocates of women's suffrage
a. acknowledged that women were biologically weaker than men but claimed that they deserved the vote anyway. b. had abandoned the effort to persuade western states to grant women the right to vote. c. formed strong alliances with African Americans seeking voting rights. d. argued that the vote would enable women to extend their roles as mothers and homemakers to the public world. e. insisted on the inherent political and moral equality of men and women.
In 1844, the Democratic Party was more pro-expansionist than was the Whig Party.
Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)
Each of the following could be referred to as a conquistador except
a. Hernán Cortés. b. Francisco Pizarro. c. Vasco da Gama. d. Francisco de Coronado. e. Hernando de Soto