Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Charlotte Perkins Gilman, a well-known early-1900s writer, argued that people can and should consciously shape how society changes instead of leaving everything to cutthroat competition. She thought work (like crafts, arts, and science) helps drive social progress and that people have a duty to do work that benefits society. Gilman pushed for reorganizing society to remove fixed male and female job roles and strict hierarchies, saying that while aggressive "male" traits once helped build complex societies, future progress needs a balance that includes cooperative, nurturing "female" traits.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on the third paragraph: find where Gilman says male-dominated arrangements were once "necessary" but now should be abandoned in favor of cooperation and nurturance; infer that something once beneficial can later be detrimental to progress.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage27.Which one of the following is implied by Gilman's views as described in the passage?
Correct Answer
A
Supported by passage sentences: "A central goal of the reorganization she envisioned would be the abandonment of gender-specific work roles and hierarchical relationships." and "Gilman believed that at one time such arrangements had been necessary for evolution because what she felt were male traits of assertiveness, combat, and display were essential for the development of a complex society. Future progress, she believed, now required the restoration of a balance that would include what she saw as female qualities of cooperation and nurturance." These sentences show Gilman thought social arrangements that were once useful can later impede progress and therefore should be replaced — which implies that social conditions beneficial at one time can be detrimental at another.
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