Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Before 1660 husbands controlled their wives' property. In the late 1600s and 1700s marriages began to include contract-like terms, and some historians said that gave women more rights, but Susan Staves shows that judges often used old rules to limit those rights so the gains were inconsistent and usually favored men. For example, wives often could not sell dower while husbands could sell curtesy; pin money and separate maintenance had strict rules that made them hard to use or enforce; and widows could lose jointure if they remarried. Staves therefore revises earlier claims that these changes really weakened male authority or made widows much better off.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the sentence that describes judges' behavior toward marriage-contract decisions and choose the option that matches the passage's explicit statement about judges reverting to earlier property assumptions.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage26.According to the passage, Staves indicates that which one of the following was true of judicial decisions on contractual rights?
Correct Answer
C
The passage explicitly states: 'Staves shows, however, that as judges gained power over decisions on marriage contracts, they tended to fall back on pre-1660 assumptions about property.' This directly supports choice C. The passage also says that 'whatever gains marriage contracts may briefly have represented for women were undermined by judicial decisions about women's contractual rights' and that definitions of property remained 'inconsistent—generally to women's detriment,' reinforcing that judges' rulings reflected older, pre-1660 assumptions.
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