Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Three historians disagree about why Britain ended the slave trade in 1807 and freed slaves in 1834. Eric Williams says it was mostly for economic reasons because the colonies were becoming costly and inefficient. Seymour Drescher argues that large popular movements and moral pressure show it wasn’t just about money. David Eltis combines these views, saying Britain’s economy changed so that paid workers and new consumer markets became more useful than forced labor, and those economic shifts helped persuade leaders to support abolition.
Logic Breakdown
Ask what rhetorical function the citation of "certain notables" serves in the final paragraph; locate Eltis's contrast with Drescher and the sentence about notables to see whether he is undermining Drescher's view of British liberties or making some other point.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage22.It can be inferred that Eltis cites the views of "certain notables " (third sentence of the last paragraph) in order to
Correct Answer
A
Eltis uses the citation to undercut Drescher's idealized picture of British traditions of liberty by showing that even elite opinion accepted coerced labor. Support from the passage: "Eschewing Drescher's idealization of British traditions of liberty, Eltis points to continuing use of low wages and Draconian vagrancy laws... Indeed, certain notables even called for the enslavement of unemployed laborers who roamed the British countryside—an acceptance of coerced labor that Eltis attributes to a preindustrial desire to keep labor costs low and exports competitive." This passage shows the notables example is offered to demonstrate a lack of strong liberal traditions (acceptance of coerced labor) rather than to make the other claims presented in the wrong choices.
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