GMAT 考满分题库

- 阅读RC -
题目材料

     Two historians of the First World War both depict women as taking up roles previously reserved for men, but they differ slightly in the significance they ascribe to these unprecedented but temporary wartime duties. Gail Braybon describes the war as a liberating experience for many women. Although women working in munitions factories were subject to new dangers, such as explosions and trinitrotoluene poisoning, they were mindful of and proud of supporting the war effort, whether or not they considered the broader significance of their actions. Joshua Goldstein too describes a sense of freedom in women but emphasizes that it was short-lived. Although the war bent gender roles, it did not lessen hostility to women in traditionally male jobs, increase compensation for female labor, or uproot the notion that home life was a strictly female responsibility. Braybon might reply by noting that, while other changes were slower in coming, some women suffragists supported the war and women's role in it to further their cause, and this may indeed have contributed to the advent of women's right to vote after the war, even by Goldstein's account. Perhaps more central to Braybon's position is that the liberation that women experienced during the war was one of sentiment and therefore made no less real by the lack of accompanying widespread reform. Furthermore, even though the spirit of liberation must have faded with the end of the war, it might have lived on in a latent form and ultimately contributed to the formation of the women's movement.    

The passage suggests that Goldstein's interpretation of the roles played by women in the First World War would support which of the following views of women's history?

  • A

    Women's status did not advance relative to that of men during the First World War.

  • B

    Women after the First World War were not as likely to be conscious of their status as were women during the First World War.

  • C

    Some advances in the women's movement were temporary.

  • D

    The First World War increased the value of female labor, but it did not necessarily impart upon women a sense of liberation.

  • EWomen's occupations were generally more respected prior to the First World War than during the First World War.
显示答案
正确答案: C

讨论题目 或 发起提问

|

题目讨论

  • 按热度
  • 按顺序

最新提问