His 200 4-4 Week 4 Short Responses - Humanities
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Week 4 Short Responses – Question 1
1.
2.
3.
4.
Your best friend
People reading a newspaper editorial youve written
Your professor
The audience at a conference where you are presenting
Your best friend:
People reading a newspaper editorial you’ve written:
Your professor:
The audience at a conference where you are presenting:
Week 4 Short Responses – Question 2
Consider how your audience might influence the information you include in an historical
analysis essay about the Womens Suffrage Movement.
What audience would be most interested in reading about the womens movement? How
would you tailor your presentation to that audience? What message would be most
appropriate for this audience?
Answer:
Week 4 Short Responses – Question 3
Lets say the intended audience for your historical analysis essay about the legal battle for
womens suffrage is a group of civil rights lawyers. How would you explain the legal
background of the Constitution and the Nineteenth Amendment? How would this approach
compare and contrast to an audience of high school students?
Answer:
Week 4 Short Responses – Question 4
Was President Kennedys decision to support the Equal Rights Amendment a necessary cause
for the amendments passage by Congress?
Answer:
Week 4 Short Responses – Question 5
Was the social tumult of the 1960s a necessary cause of the womens liberation movement?
Answer:
Week 4 Short Responses – Question 6
Simone de Beauvoir was the intellectual founder of the womens liberation movement.
Tailor this thesis statement into a message suitable for an audience of high school history
students.
Answer:
Week 4 Short Responses – Question 7
The womens movements focus on issues related to sexual freedom, including reproductive
rights, galvanized support among many younger women, but it cost the movement support
among many older and more socially conservative women. Tailor this message for an
audience consisting of students in a Womens Studies class.
Answer:
Theme: Communicating Historical Ideas
Overview
Studying history teaches us, in many ways, how to think: about the past, about the world around us, and
about how that world might look in the future.
Writing history, on the other hand, teaches us how to communicate: how to organize our thoughts, distill
our research findings into a clear thesis statement, and tailor our message to the needs of our chosen
audience.
In Theme: Communicating Historical Ideas, well explore how
historians go about the business of writing history. To illustrate this
process, well examine case studies involving the womens movement
and the centurieslong fight to expand the rights of American women.
Because all good historical writing begins with good research, well
look at how to assess primary and secondary sources—which ones are
appropriate for an academic research paper, and which ones arent—
and how best to search for them in Shapiro Library and primary
resource depositories.
(Click icon for citation)
Well also look at how historians turn their research into a coherent
written work. The process begins with a research question; based upon
research, a historian will then come up with an answer to that question,
which forms the basis of his or her thesis statement. Finally, the
historian considers the audience that he or she will be writing for—is it
other historians, or local businesspeople, or maybe high school
students?—and tailors the thesis statement into a message thats
appropriate for that audience.
At the end of Theme: Communicating Historical Ideas, youll have an opportunity to begin putting these
concepts to use. You will be required to submit a writing plan that details the topic of your own historical
event analysis; the primary and secondary sources you plan to use; the audience for your analysis; and
how you plan to tailor your message to that audience.
While the writing plan represents an important element of your final course grade, in the long run its
even more important than that. In the real world outside the classroom, good writing is a valuable but
all too rare commodity. Whether you pursue a career in business or science or medicine or the arts,
youre going to need to organize your thoughts and communicate your ideas clearly, concisely, and
forcefully. Writing history is a good way to learn how to do just that.
Course Outcomes
After completing this theme, you should be able to:
Select appropriate and relevant primary and secondary sources in investigating foundational historic
events
Communicate effectively to specific audiences in examining fundamental aspects of human history
Copyright © 2017 MindEdge Inc. All rights reserved. Duplication prohibited.
Theme: Communicating Historical Ideas | Learning Block 3-1: The Long
Road to Womens Rights
The Constitution, as originally written and ratified, had nothing to say about womens rights—indeed, it
had nothing to say about women at all.
The Constitutions original language was strictly
genderneutral, referring repeatedly to persons or
citizens, rather than to men or women. Gender
distinctions did not enter the Constitution until 1868,
with the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment,
which addressed the voting rights of all
male...citizens.
In this theme, we will look at two crucial events in the
long campaign to expand the rights of American
women. The woman suffrage movement, which fought
to extend the right to vote to all American women,
ended successfully in 1920 with ratification of the
A monument to three pioneers of the woman
Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution. But the
suffrage movement—Elizabeth Cady Stanton,
effort to pass the Equal Rights Amendment, which Susan B. Anthony, and Lucretia Mott—in the U.S.
would have guaranteed women all the same legal
Capitol. (Click icon for citation)
rights as men, ended in defeat in 1982, when the
amendment fell three states shy of the 38 needed for ratification.
We will use these two case studies to examine the historical concept of causality and to learn more about
evaluating and searching for primary and secondary sources. Evaluating sources is important, because it
helps you make sure that whatever research you use in your academic research paper is appropriate.
Learning Objectives
In this learning block, you will:
Be introduced to the core concept of this theme: The Long Road to Womens Rights
Explore the historical concept of causality
The Long Road to Womens Rights
The Constitution the Founders crafted was a product of British common law and 18thcentury thinking,
neither of which was particularly friendly to women. At the time of the Constitutions ratification, for
instance, a womans rights depended almost entirely on her marital status: in most states, unmarried
women, including widows, could own property, enter into contracts, and live where they pleased. But the
rights of married women were totally subordinated to the rights of their husbands. (Salmon, 2016)
Moreover, by establishing a system of federalism, the Constitution left most questions of daytoday
rights—the right to vote, to marry, to inherit property—to the states, whose policies were highly
restrictive toward women. At the time of ratification, New Jersey was the only state that allowed women
to vote—and it rescinded that right in 1807.
Members of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, before a meeting with
President Woodrow Wilson. (Click icon for citation)
The long campaign to expand the rights of American women has gone on for almost two centuries, and it
has seen both victories and defeats. In Theme: Communicating Historical Ideas, we will focus on two
major goals of the womens rights movement. The Nineteenth Amendment, which guaranteed women the
right to vote, was ratified, after decades of effort, in 1920. But the Equal Rights Amendment, which
would have ensured women equality of rights under the law, was defeated after a contentious national
debate that came to a close in 1982.
The womens rights movement began in earnest in July 1848 with the Seneca Falls Convention, a two
day gathering in upstate New York that drew 300 participants to discuss the social, civil, and religious
condition and rights of woman. Its principal organizers, Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, had
met eight years earlier at the Worlds AntiSlavery Convention in London—at which the women
delegates, including Mott, were barred from speaking and were required to sit in a segregated area.
(Wellman, 2004)
The following chart summarizes some of the major historical factors that led to the birth of the womens
movement at the Seneca Falls Convention:
The Seneca Falls Convention was the product of a wide range of historical factors:
The rise of the abolition movement, many of whose leaders strongly encouraged the
participation of women;
The religious revival known as the Second Great Awakening, which inspired many women to
become active in social causes;
The influence of the Society of Friends, or Quakers, some of whose more progressive branches
advocated an expanded role for women in religious affairs; and
The political movement in support of Married Womens Property Acts, state laws that accorded
married women some limited economic rights. (Wellman, 2004; Library of Congress, 2013)
The Seneca Falls Convention produced the famous Declaration of Sentiments, based on the
Declaration of Independence, which included the simple but radical assertion: We hold these truths to
be selfevident: that all men and women are created equal. The Declaration was followed by a series of
13 Resolutions calling for legal and social equality for women, including the assertion that it is the duty
of the women of this country to secure to themselves their sacred right to the elective franchise. (This
link will take you to the full text of the Declaration of Sentiments.)
In its early years, the womens movement focused on economic and social issues, including the lack of
educational opportunities for girls and women. The advent of the Civil War brought an almost exclusive
focus on the abolition of slavery, but while the end of the war meant an end to slavery, it also created
profound disappointment for many womensrights advocates. The failure of Congress to include women
in the guarantees of legal and voting rights, which were extended to freed slaves in the Fourteenth and
Fifteenth Amendments, caused a schism in the womens movement.
While leaders of the movement agreed on the goal of woman suffrage—securing for women the right to
vote—they disagreed strongly over the best way to achieve that goal. In 1869, Stanton and Susan B.
Anthony created the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA), which focused on changing
federal law; the NWSA opposed the Fifteenth Amendment because it excluded women. That same year,
Lucy Stone, a prominent lobbyist for womens rights, helped form the American Woman Suffrage
Association (AWSA), which supported the Fifteenth Amendment and focused its efforts at the state
level. (U.S. House of Representatives, 2016)
While these two groups would eventually unite, more than 50 years would pass before woman suffrage
would be enshrined in the Constitution by the Nineteenth Amendment. And, with the defeat of the Equal
Rights Amendment, the larger goal envisioned by those who attended the Seneca Falls Convention in
1848—full legal equality for all American women—has yet to be realized.
References
Library of Congress, American Women. (2013, February 13). Married Womens Property Laws. Retrieved from
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/awhhtml/awlaw3/property_law.html
Salmon, M. (2016). The Legal Status of Women, 17761830. Retrieved from http://www.gilderlehrman.org/history
byera/womenshistory/essays/legalstatuswomen1776\%E2\%80\%931830, May 16, 2016.
U.S. House of Representatives, History, Art & Archives; Office of the Historian, Women in Congress, 1917 2006.
(2016).
The
Womens
Rights
Movement,
1848
1920.
Retrieved
from
http://history.house.gov/ExhibitionsandPublications/WIC/HistoricalEssays/NoLady/WomensRights/,
April 27, 2016.
Wellman, J. (2004). The Road to Seneca Falls: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the First Womens Rights Convention.
Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press.
Historical Causality
One purpose of history is to explain the past—and the concept of causality is fundamental to that effort.
(Munro, 2016)
Searching for the causes of a historical event means, essentially, looking for an explanation of why the
event occurred. But that search is rarely as simple as many people think.
Indeed, one of the most important things to remember about historical causality is that historical events
usually have many causes. The process of sorting out all those causes and figuring out which ones were
more important than others is rarely easy.
Back in grammar school, you may have been asked questions like What caused the Revolutionary
War? or Why did the South secede from the Union? Depending on how lenient your teacher was back
then, you might have gotten away with simple answers such as Taxation without representation or To
protect slavery. But by now, you should realize that those simplistic answers didnt tell the whole story.
(Waring, 2010)
Historical events almost always have multiple causes. Consider a quick example: in Theme:
Communicating Historical Ideas, we are looking at the centurieslong effort to expand the rights of
American women. One important part of that effort was the campaign for woman suffrage, which we
will look at in more detail in Theme: Communicating Historical Ideas, Learning Block 34.
American women won the right to vote when, after more than 70 years of campaigning for suffrage, they
saw the Nineteenth Amendment ratified in 1920—but why was this Amendment finally approved? To
put it another way, what factors caused the womens suffrage movement to succeed, after so many
decades of frustration and failure?
There are a lot of factors that led to the success of the womens suffrage movement: strong leadership of
women such as Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Carrie Chapman Catt, and Alice Paul;
changing attitudes toward the role of women in society and in the workplace; the role of women in
supporting the war effort during World War I and the wars impact on the publics conception of
democracy; the extension of voting rights to freed African Americans, through the Fifteenth
Amendment; political decisions by leaders such as President Woodrow Wilson; and the political
momentum from successful local campaigns to win woman suffrage in more than a dozen states before
1920.
All of these causes contributed to the passage and ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment. Which was
most important? As with so much else in the study of history, theres no definitive answer to that
question; different historians may emphasize different causes, depending on which historical lens each
applies and how each interprets the historical evidence. (Brien, 2013) As you evaluate different
secondary sources, you will see how these differences in emphasis can lead to different conclusions
about the relative importance of historical events.
References
Brien, J. (2013). The Role of Causation in History History in the Making Vol. 2, No. 1 72 81. Retrieved from
https://historyitm.files.wordpress.com/2013/08/brien.pdf
Munro,
N.
(2016).
Pathways:
Causation
in
History.
http://www.philosophypathways.com/essays/munro2.html, April 27, 2016.
Retrieved
from
Waring, S. (2010). Escaping Myopia: Teaching Students about Historical Causality. The History Teacher Volume
43,
Number
2
(February,
2010),
283
288.
Retrieved
from
http://www.societyforhistoryeducation.org/pdfs/Waring.pdf
Types of Causes
In looking for the causes of a historical event, a primary consideration is chronology—that is, the order
in which key events took place. (Waring, 2010) For one event to have caused another event, it must have
taken place before the second event. But chronology does not tell us the whole story: just because one
event happened before another does not necessarily mean that it caused the second event.
In a famous example often cited by logicians, the fact that a rooster crowed before sunrise does not mean
that the rooster caused the sun to rise. This is an example of what logicians and historians call the post
hoc, ergo propter hoc fallacy. (Carroll, 2015)
Historians also distinguish between proximate causes and ultimate causes. A proximate cause is an event
that immediately precedes, or is directly responsible for causing, some other event. The proximate cause
of the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment was the vote by the Tennessee House of Representatives
to approve the amendment on August 18, 1920.
An ultimate cause (also known as a distal cause) is an event that, when viewed at a higher level, may be
considered to be the real reason an event occurred. One of the ultimate causes of the ratification of the
Nineteenth Amendment was the shift in American public attitudes toward the role of women in society.
At the most simplistic level, a proximate cause tells us how an event happened; an ultimate cause is more
likely to tell us why it happened. Its important to remember that most historical events have multiple
proximate and ultimate causes. (Palazzo, 2007)
In considering the relative importance of different causes, historians often divide them into necessary
causes and contributory causes. (Waring, 2010) A necessary cause is an event or trend that is essential to
causing some other event; without the necessary cause, the second event could not take place. Approval
by 36 state legislatures was a necessary cause for ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment.
By contrast, contributory causes are not essential to causing some other event, but they may make that
event more likely to occur. President Woodrow Wilsons eventual decision to come out in favor of
woman suffrage was a contributory cause for ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment, but it was not an
essential factor in the Amendments success.
Once again, most historical events have multiple necessary and contributory causes.
References
Carroll,
R. (2015, November 18). The
http://skepdic.com/posthoc.html
Skeptics
Dictionary:
post
hoc
fallacy.
Retrieved
from
Palazzo, A. (2007, March 30). Transcription and Translation: Proximal vs. Ultimate Causation. Retrieved from
http://scienceblogs.com/transcript/2007/03/30/proximalvsultimatecausation/
Waring, S. (2010). Escaping Myopia: Teaching Students about Historical Causality. The History Teacher Volume
43,
Number
2
(February,
2010),
283
288.
Retrieved
from
http://www.societyforhistoryeducation.org/pdfs/Waring.pdf
Theme: Communicating Historical Ideas | Learning Block 3-2:
Secondary Sources
As you explore the case studies in this course, it should be apparent how important source material is to
the study of history. In Theme: Approaches to History, you learned about the difference between primary
and secondary sources, as well as how to search effectively in the databases available in the Shapiro
Library. Of course, with the large amount of source material available to you, it is important to know the
best way to sift through all the information.
In this learning block, you will learn strategies for evaluating secondary sources for relevancy to your
essay, as well as their accuracy and objectivity. These skills will be essential in this course as well as
while your pursue your future studies at SNHU.
Learning Objectives
In this learning block, you will:
Learn how to assess secondary sources for accuracy, relevancy, intent, and authoritativeness using
the A.R.I.A. criteria
Understand how to critically examine historical information on websites
Become familiar with the kinds of secondary sources that are appropriate for use in your ...
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