Implication of Staves' work 2 ·Challenges an assumption underlying Stones' view
Stones argued that in late 18th century, wealthy men married widows less often than they used to, because more people started to marry for love rather than for financial reasons. Staves counters the assumption that widows had more money than non-widows.
Passage Style
Critique or debate
27.
The passage suggests that the ██████████ █████████ ██ ███ █████ ████████ ██ ███ ███████ █████ ██ ████ ██████ ██ █████ ████ █████ ███ ██ ███ █████████ ███████████
Question Type
Implied
Other’s perspective
This is an Implied question about the traditional historians’ perspective. Recall their overall perspective: that the post-Restoration shift toward contractual marriages benefited women.
Unsupported. The historians think that the changed views about property did benefit women. We have no reason to believe that they think the changes didn’t benefit women until the late 18th century.
Unsupported. The historians do think that marriage contracts represented a gain for women, but they don’t say anything about judicial resistance to women’s contractual rights. Staves— not the historians— says that judges relied on outdated assumptions when making decisions about marriage contracts.
Unsupported. The historians don’t say anything about “most laws.” They only argue that the post-Restoration shift toward contractual marriages represented a gain for women. We don’t know if that gain was small or large.
Difficulty
71% of people who answer get this correct
This is a difficult question.
It is similar in difficulty to other questions in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%136
154
75%171
Analysis
Implied
Other’s perspective
Critique or debate
Law
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
1%
157
b
22%
166
c
3%
159
d
71%
168
e
1%
162
Question history
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