Library/PT 101/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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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

Read the paragraph on Eltis and locate the sentence where he rejects Drescher's account; determine which contention Eltis explicitly disputes (look for his rejection of liberty-based explanations).

Passage Stimulus

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27.

According to the passage, Eltis argues against which one of the following contentions?

Correct Answer
C
Eltis explicitly rejects the idea that British opposition to slavery was rooted in British views of personal liberty. The passage states, 'Eschewing Drescher's idealization of British traditions of liberty, Eltis points to continuing use of low wages and Draconian vagrancy laws...' and later summarizes his position: 'Eltis thus concludes that, while Williams may well have underestimated the economic viability of the British colonies employing forced labor in the early 1800s, his insight into the economic motives for abolition was partly accurate.' He also emphasizes that 'British leaders became committed to colonial labor reform only when they became convinced... that free labor was more beneficial to the imperial economy.' These lines show Eltis attributes abolitionary change to economic factors rather than to a motivation based on views of personal liberty.
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