Library/PT 103/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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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 third sentence and restate the historians' claim there: they argued that the marriage-as-contract trend reflected changing post-Restoration views about democracy and property and represented a gain for women; choose the answer that matches that claim.

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27.

The passage suggests that the historians mentioned in the third sentence of the passage would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements?

Correct Answer
D
D restates the historians' position given in sentence 3: "Historians have traditionally argued that this trend represented a gain for women, one that reflects changing views about democracy and property following the English Restoration in 1660." The preceding sentence also links the shift to contractual features in marriage to the shift from land-based to commercial wealth, supporting D's claim that changing views after the Restoration affected property in a way historians saw as beneficial to women.
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