Author Question: The authors argue that women's work was changed most during the war as far as the A) racial ... (Read 82 times)

roselinechinyere27m

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The authors argue that women's work was changed most during the war as far as the
 
  A) racial makeup of working women. B) eagerness of women to do work.
  C) percentage of women working. D) kinds of work available to women.

Question 2

Most white southerners saw slavery as a benign institution. What evidence surfaces from the domestic slave trade that shows this conclusion is false?
 
  What will be an ideal response?



princessflame2016

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Answer to Question 1

D

Answer to Question 2

Ideal Answer: The ideal answer should:
1. Define southern white interpretations of slavery as positive for blacks in terms of support, Christian teachings, and benefits from close association to white Americans.
2. Define the domestic slave trade as a system that transferred one million slaves from the Upper South to the Deep South in the early 1800s.
3. Outline the evidence for the trade as harmful: breaking up of families and marriages; families could not stay connected across time and space.



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