Deck 10: Revivalism, Reform and Artistic Renaissance, 1820-1850

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Question
<strong>  How did Charles G. Finney use the tools of the market revolution to further the goals of the Second Great Awakening?</strong> A) He stressed the political message of egalitarianism found in Jacksonian democracy. B) He utilized the expanding publishing industry to distribute printed religious materials. C) He emphasized that the economic profits gained by new technology led to salvation. D) He underscored the fact that workers no longer needed to work as hard as they had done before the advent of new technology. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
How did Charles G. Finney use the tools of the market revolution to further the goals of the Second Great Awakening?

A) He stressed the political message of egalitarianism found in Jacksonian democracy.
B) He utilized the expanding publishing industry to distribute printed religious materials.
C) He emphasized that the economic profits gained by new technology led to salvation.
D) He underscored the fact that workers no longer needed to work as hard as they had done before the advent of new technology.
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Question
<strong>  How did changes in religious belief influence ideas about prison and punishment?</strong> A) The prison system began to cast criminal behavior in terms of sinfulness and innate depravity. B) Prisoners and the mentally ill were housed together in wretched conditions. C) Prisons became penitentiaries where prisoners had opportunities to repent and reform. D) Prisoners were given greater access to educational resources and public speaking events. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
How did changes in religious belief influence ideas about prison and punishment?

A) The prison system began to cast criminal behavior in terms of sinfulness and innate depravity.
B) Prisoners and the mentally ill were housed together in wretched conditions.
C) Prisons became "penitentiaries" where prisoners had opportunities to repent and reform.
D) Prisoners were given greater access to educational resources and public speaking events.
Question
<strong>    Southern and Northern Democrats in the House of Representatives passed the gag rule in order to .</strong> A) stop the immediate abolition of slavery B) outlaw the internal slave trade in the United States C) automatically table and not consider antislavery petitions sent to Congress D) promote the benefits of slavery <div style=padding-top: 35px> <strong>    Southern and Northern Democrats in the House of Representatives passed the gag rule in order to .</strong> A) stop the immediate abolition of slavery B) outlaw the internal slave trade in the United States C) automatically table and not consider antislavery petitions sent to Congress D) promote the benefits of slavery <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Southern and Northern Democrats in the House of Representatives passed the "gag rule" in order to .

A) stop the immediate abolition of slavery
B) outlaw the internal slave trade in the United States
C) automatically table and not consider antislavery petitions sent to Congress
D) promote the benefits of slavery
Question
<strong>  What message does the lithograph The Way of Good and Evil send to its audience?</strong> A) Americans resisted the social ills found in their society. B) A person could choose sin over good deeds and still be saved. C) Achieving an education was unnecessary to obtain salvation. D) People faced a clear choice of salvation or eternal damnation. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
What message does the lithograph The Way of Good and Evil send to its audience?

A) Americans resisted the social ills found in their society.
B) A person could choose sin over good deeds and still be saved.
C) Achieving an education was unnecessary to obtain salvation.
D) People faced a clear choice of salvation or eternal damnation.
Question
<strong>  Through his newspaper The Liberator, became a leading spokesperson for immediatism.</strong> A) David Walker B) Hiram Powers C) William Lloyd Garrison D) Thomas R. Dew <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Through his newspaper The Liberator, became a leading spokesperson for immediatism.

A) David Walker
B) Hiram Powers
C) William Lloyd Garrison
D) Thomas R. Dew
Question
<strong>  What was the Second Great Awakening?</strong> A) a literary movement B) a movement for political reform C) the period of recovery from an economic panic D) a religious revival <div style=padding-top: 35px>
What was the Second Great Awakening?

A) a literary movement
B) a movement for political reform
C) the period of recovery from an economic panic
D) a religious revival
Question
<strong>  What ironic element found in A Militia Muster contradicts the Reverend Lyman Beecher's belief that temperance organizations were comparable to a disciplined moral militia?</strong> A) Temperance organizations were mostly made up of women. B) Militias promoted violence while temperance organizations favored peaceful messages. C) Temperance organizations excluded African Americans from membership. D) The militiamen in the image are engaged in intoxicated revelries. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
What ironic element found in "A Militia Muster" contradicts the Reverend Lyman Beecher's belief that temperance organizations were comparable to "a disciplined moral militia"?

A) Temperance organizations were mostly made up of women.
B) Militias promoted violence while temperance organizations favored peaceful messages.
C) Temperance organizations excluded African Americans from membership.
D) The militiamen in the image are engaged in intoxicated revelries.
Question
<strong>  Abolitionists created jigsaw puzzles such as this one mainly to .</strong> A) educate Northern children about the evils of slavery B) entertain laborers after their long work day C) promote the African colonization movement D) annoy Southern slave owners <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Abolitionists created jigsaw puzzles such as this one mainly to .

A) educate Northern children about the evils of slavery
B) entertain laborers after their long work day
C) promote the African colonization movement
D) annoy Southern slave owners
Question
<strong>  Horace Mann's most notable contributions were in the field of .</strong> A) religion B) education C) women's rights D) temperance <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Horace Mann's most notable contributions were in the field of .

A) religion
B) education
C) women's rights
D) temperance
Question
<strong>  The American Colonization Society called for the transportation of free blacks to the African colony of .</strong> A) Benin B) Liberia C) Senegal D) Nigeria <div style=padding-top: 35px>
The American Colonization Society called for the transportation of free blacks to the African colony of .

A) Benin
B) Liberia
C) Senegal
D) Nigeria
Question
<strong>  Early Federalist leaders like Alexander Hamilton and John Jay called for the abolition of slavery because slavery _ .</strong> A) threatened the republican values of liberty and virtue B) made the South more economically powerful than the North C) rejected the ideas of racial equality and justice D) gave the Southern states more dominance in the House of Representatives <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Early Federalist leaders like Alexander Hamilton and John Jay called for the abolition of slavery because slavery _ .

A) threatened the republican values of liberty and virtue
B) made the South more economically powerful than the North
C) rejected the ideas of racial equality and justice
D) gave the Southern states more dominance in the House of Representatives
Question
<strong>  Architect John Haviland designed New York City's Halls of Justice, which were better known as the Tombs, in the Egyptian Revival style that characterized sepulchral gloom in order to .</strong> A) highlight the more successful aspects of prison reform B) link these buildings to the certain deaths that prisoners faced C) intimidate and project the power of the law D) generate greater sympathy for prisoners <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Architect John Haviland designed New York City's Halls of Justice, which were better known as the "Tombs," in the Egyptian Revival style that characterized sepulchral gloom in order to .

A) highlight the more successful aspects of prison reform
B) link these buildings to the certain deaths that prisoners faced
C) intimidate and project the power of the law
D) generate greater sympathy for prisoners
Question
<strong>  Angelina and Sarah Grimké were unique from other abolitionists because .</strong> A) few women were involved in the abolitionist movement B) they were the daughters of a wealthy Southern planter C) they convinced Quakers to join the antislavery movement D) American women were more sympathetic to the proslavery movement <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Angelina and Sarah Grimké were unique from other abolitionists because .

A) few women were involved in the abolitionist movement
B) they were the daughters of a wealthy Southern planter
C) they convinced Quakers to join the antislavery movement
D) American women were more sympathetic to the proslavery movement
Question
<strong>  What aspect of religious revivalism is evoked in this painting of a camp meeting?</strong> A) the gentility of its attendees B) its small size C) its emotional intensity D) the diversity of its attendees <div style=padding-top: 35px>
What aspect of religious revivalism is evoked in this painting of a camp meeting?

A) the gentility of its attendees
B) its small size
C) its emotional intensity
D) the diversity of its attendees
Question
<strong>  How was Charles Grandison Finney's theology of perfectionism different from pre-existing Calvinist beliefs?</strong> A) Perfectionism stressed that people could achieve their own salvation through free will. B) Under the theology of perfectionism, most people were condemned to damnation from birth. C) Perfectionism could only be achieved if one was poor and humble. D) Perfectionist doctrine stated that only God determined individuals' destinies. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
How was Charles Grandison Finney's theology of perfectionism different from pre-existing Calvinist beliefs?

A) Perfectionism stressed that people could achieve their own salvation through free will.
B) Under the theology of perfectionism, most people were condemned to damnation from birth.
C) Perfectionism could only be achieved if one was poor and humble.
D) Perfectionist doctrine stated that only God determined individuals' destinies.
Question
<strong>    Former slave Henry Box Brown, the central figure in this image, attracted many supporters of abolition to his speaking engagements because he .</strong> A) mailed himself to freedom in a box B) hid in a box while Southern patrollers searched for him C) spoke from the top of a box at his events D) used boxes to ship other slaves to freedom in the North <div style=padding-top: 35px> <strong>    Former slave Henry Box Brown, the central figure in this image, attracted many supporters of abolition to his speaking engagements because he .</strong> A) mailed himself to freedom in a box B) hid in a box while Southern patrollers searched for him C) spoke from the top of a box at his events D) used boxes to ship other slaves to freedom in the North <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Former slave Henry "Box" Brown, the central figure in this image, attracted many supporters of abolition to his speaking engagements because he .

A) mailed himself to freedom in a box
B) hid in a box while Southern patrollers searched for him
C) spoke from the top of a box at his events
D) used boxes to ship other slaves to freedom in the North
Question
<strong>  When the Manifesto of the Washington Total Abstinence Societies that was written in 1841 stated that We hold these truths to be self-evident; that all men are created temperate; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain natural and innocent desires; that among them are the appetite for cold water and the pursuit of happiness!, its members were addressing abstinence from .</strong> A) consummating sexual relations B) consuming unhealthy foods C) imbibing alcoholic beverages D) participating in events such as dueling and gambling <div style=padding-top: 35px>
When the Manifesto of the Washington Total Abstinence Societies that was written in 1841 stated that "We hold these truths to be self-evident; that all men are created temperate; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain natural and innocent desires; that among them are the appetite for cold water and the pursuit of happiness!", its members were addressing abstinence from .

A) consummating sexual relations
B) consuming unhealthy foods
C) imbibing alcoholic beverages
D) participating in events such as dueling and gambling
Question
<strong>  How did David Walker, a free black abolitionist, change other abolitionists' views on slavery when he published an Appeal?</strong> A) He stressed the need for violent slave insurrections. B) He gained more support from Southern intellectuals for African colonization. C) He convinced other abolitionists that emancipation should be immediate, not gradual. D) He made abolitionism a religious movement linked to humane treatment for the first time. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
How did David Walker, a free black abolitionist, change other abolitionists' views on slavery when he published an Appeal?

A) He stressed the need for violent slave insurrections.
B) He gained more support from Southern intellectuals for African colonization.
C) He convinced other abolitionists that emancipation should be immediate, not gradual.
D) He made abolitionism a religious movement linked to humane treatment for the first time.
Question
<strong>  The push for more humane treatment of the mentally ill was promoted by .</strong> A) Lyman Beecher B) Horace Mann C) Elizabeth Cady Stanton D) Dorothea Dix <div style=padding-top: 35px>
The push for more humane treatment of the mentally ill was promoted by .

A) Lyman Beecher
B) Horace Mann
C) Elizabeth Cady Stanton
D) Dorothea Dix
Question
<strong>  The belief that people should let the Common School be expanded to its capabilities…and nine tenths of the crimes in the penal code would become obsolete; the long catalogue of human ills would be abridged, reflects the idea that universal public education was a style of reform.</strong> A) preventive B) curative C) remedial D) utopian <div style=padding-top: 35px>
The belief that people should "let the Common School be expanded to its capabilities…and nine tenths of the crimes in the penal code would become obsolete; the long catalogue of human ills would be abridged," reflects the idea that universal public education was a style of reform.

A) preventive
B) curative
C) remedial
D) utopian
Question
<strong>  Mormonism was first established in Palmyra, New York by _.</strong> A) Mary Cragin B) Francis Wright C) Joseph Smith D) Robert Owen <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Mormonism was first established in Palmyra, New York by _.

A) Mary Cragin
B) Francis Wright
C) Joseph Smith
D) Robert Owen
Question
<strong>  Secular utopian communities such as those in New Harmony, Indiana, and those organized by Charles Fourier were the result of .</strong> A) hostility to the market revolution B) openness to multiple sexual relationships C) opposition to slavery D) a desire for intellectual improvement <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Secular utopian communities such as those in New Harmony, Indiana, and those organized by Charles Fourier were the result of .

A) hostility to the market revolution
B) openness to multiple sexual relationships
C) opposition to slavery
D) a desire for intellectual improvement
Question
<strong>  What popular attitude toward the Millerite movement is reflected in this illustration?</strong> A) admiration for preparing for the apocalypse B) criticism of its inclination to isolate each other from society C) mockery of its expectation of the apocalypse D) ridicule of the group's excessive thrift <div style=padding-top: 35px>
What popular attitude toward the Millerite movement is reflected in this illustration?

A) admiration for preparing for the apocalypse
B) criticism of its inclination to isolate each other from society
C) mockery of its expectation of the apocalypse
D) ridicule of the group's excessive thrift
Question
<strong>  The Seneca Falls Convention of 1848 was a turning point in women's history in the United States because it was the start of .</strong> A) women's participation in the abolitionist movement B) the women's rights movement C) the temperance movement D) married women having greater control over their property <div style=padding-top: 35px>
The Seneca Falls Convention of 1848 was a turning point in women's history in the United States because it was the start of .

A) women's participation in the abolitionist movement
B) the women's rights movement
C) the temperance movement
D) married women having greater control over their property
Question
<strong>  The Bloomer costume was initially designed so that women could .</strong> A) enhance the female figure B) have a proper uniform for factory work C) secure freedom from oppressive fashions such as the corset D) become involved in their movement for greater equality <div style=padding-top: 35px>
The Bloomer costume was initially designed so that women could .

A) enhance the female figure
B) have a proper uniform for factory work
C) secure freedom from oppressive fashions such as the corset
D) become involved in their movement for greater equality
Question
<strong>  In her painting Domestic Happiness, artist Lily Martin Spencer intends for the woman's hand gesture to communicate both her emotional intimacy with her husband and her .</strong> A) subtle power over him B) sexual desire for him C) wish to protect their children from him D) dominion over the world of their children <div style=padding-top: 35px>
In her painting Domestic Happiness, artist Lily Martin Spencer intends for the woman's hand gesture to communicate both her emotional intimacy with her husband and her .

A) subtle power over him
B) sexual desire for him
C) wish to protect their children from him
D) dominion over the world of their children
Question
<strong>  This image of a Shaker religious dance emphasizes their belief in .</strong> A) rejection of the values of the marketplace B) communal ownership of property C) the adoption of orphans D) equality among the sexes <div style=padding-top: 35px>
This image of a Shaker religious dance emphasizes their belief in .

A) rejection of the values of the marketplace
B) communal ownership of property
C) the adoption of orphans
D) equality among the sexes
Question
<strong>  The teachings of Mother Ann Lee were the foundation for the establishment of .</strong> A) Shakerism B) Quakerism C) abolitionism D) millennialism <div style=padding-top: 35px>
The teachings of Mother Ann Lee were the foundation for the establishment of .

A) Shakerism
B) Quakerism
C) abolitionism
D) millennialism
Question
<strong>  In his Review of the Debate in the Virginia Legislature of 1831 and 1832, Professor Thomas R.Dew .</strong> A) affirmed Thomas Jefferson's earlier idea that slavery was unjust B) called for the immediate abolition of slavery in the United States C) defended the property rights of slaveholders D) supported the relocation of Virginia's slaves to Africa <div style=padding-top: 35px>
In his Review of the Debate in the Virginia Legislature of 1831 and 1832, Professor Thomas R.Dew .

A) affirmed Thomas Jefferson's earlier idea that slavery was unjust
B) called for the immediate abolition of slavery in the United States
C) defended the property rights of slaveholders
D) supported the relocation of Virginia's slaves to Africa
Question
<strong>  How does the proslavery cartoon Slavery As It Exists in America affirm John C. Calhoun's apologist views on the peculiar institution of slavery?</strong> A) Slavery was a harsher system than the factory system in the North. B) Slavery was a positive good sanctioned by the Bible and ancient philosophers. C) Slavery benefitted the entire nation due to its profitable success in commercialized farming. D) Slavery improved both the physical and moral lives of African Americans. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
How does the proslavery cartoon Slavery As It Exists in America affirm John C. Calhoun's apologist views on the "peculiar institution" of slavery?

A) Slavery was a harsher system than the factory system in the North.
B) Slavery was a positive good sanctioned by the Bible and ancient philosophers.
C) Slavery benefitted the entire nation due to its profitable success in commercialized farming.
D) Slavery improved both the physical and moral lives of African Americans.
Question
<strong>  The philosophy of Transcendentalism relied on for insights and inspiration.</strong> A) the market economy B) the abolition of slavery C) nature D) traditional religion <div style=padding-top: 35px>
The philosophy of Transcendentalism relied on for insights and inspiration.

A) the market economy
B) the abolition of slavery
C) nature
D) traditional religion
Question
<strong>  What was complex marriage as practiced in the community at Oneida, New York, that was established by John Humphrey Noyes?</strong> A) the polygamy that predominated among families within the community B) communal property ownership among members of the community C) a system of arranged marriages between members of the community D) free sexual relations between the men and women of the community <div style=padding-top: 35px>
What was complex marriage as practiced in the community at Oneida, New York, that was established by John Humphrey Noyes?

A) the polygamy that predominated among families within the community
B) communal property ownership among members of the community
C) a system of arranged marriages between members of the community
D) free sexual relations between the men and women of the community
Question
<strong>  Such reformers as Mary Gove and Paulina Wright were interested in .</strong> A) fighting for women's property rights B) encouraging sexual passivity and chastity among women C) liberating fallen women from their work in brothels D) educating women on their reproductive rights and health <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Such reformers as Mary Gove and Paulina Wright were interested in .

A) fighting for women's property rights
B) encouraging sexual passivity and chastity among women
C) liberating "fallen women" from their work in brothels
D) educating women on their reproductive rights and health
Question
<strong>  This map showing the location of both secular and religious utopian communities in the United States reveals that .</strong> A) the Mormons were a sedentary sect B) the South was not as receptive to these communities as the North C) the mid-Atlantic seacoast was a hotbed of utopian reform D) there were more Shaker communities in the Midwest than New England <div style=padding-top: 35px>
This map showing the location of both secular and religious utopian communities in the United States reveals that .

A) the Mormons were a sedentary sect
B) the South was not as receptive to these communities as the North
C) the mid-Atlantic seacoast was a hotbed of utopian reform
D) there were more Shaker communities in the Midwest than New England
Question
<strong>  What is millennialism?</strong> A) the belief that God has condemned humanity B) the belief that Judgment Day is imminent C) the belief in one's own salvation D) the belief that Americans have a special relationship with God <div style=padding-top: 35px>
What is millennialism?

A) the belief that God has condemned humanity
B) the belief that Judgment Day is imminent
C) the belief in one's own salvation
D) the belief that Americans have a special relationship with God
Question
<strong>  What values were associated with the cult of true womanhood?</strong> A) egalitarianism with their male counterparts B) piety, motherhood, and sexual passivity C) the importance of being consumers in the competitive marketplace D) women's weaknesses and tendencies toward moral depravity <div style=padding-top: 35px>
What values were associated with the "cult of true womanhood"?

A) egalitarianism with their male counterparts
B) piety, motherhood, and sexual passivity
C) the importance of being consumers in the competitive marketplace
D) women's weaknesses and tendencies toward moral depravity
Question
<strong>  Although Hiram Powers's sculpture The Greek Slave stirred up Northern sympathies against slavery, this sculpture also appealed to Southerners because it .</strong> A) compared the plight of ancient Greek slaves to Southern slaves B) shocked society with its nude depiction of the slave C) raised sympathy with contemporary Greece, which was in a republican revolution against their Turkish oppressors D) praised Christian values that were symbolized by her crucifix <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Although Hiram Powers's sculpture The Greek Slave stirred up Northern sympathies against slavery, this sculpture also appealed to Southerners because it .

A) compared the plight of ancient Greek slaves to Southern slaves
B) shocked society with its nude depiction of the slave
C) raised sympathy with contemporary Greece, which was in a republican revolution against their Turkish oppressors
D) praised Christian values that were symbolized by her crucifix
Question
<strong>  What event led Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton to focus their attention on the oppression of women?</strong> A) the introduction by Thomas Herttell of a bill to grant property rights to women B) the success they found in their work on the temperance movement C) the imposition of coverture laws restricting a woman's rights D) the restrictions they faced at the international antislavery conference in London <div style=padding-top: 35px>
What event led Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton to focus their attention on the oppression of women?

A) the introduction by Thomas Herttell of a bill to grant property rights to women
B) the success they found in their work on the temperance movement
C) the imposition of coverture laws restricting a woman's rights
D) the restrictions they faced at the international antislavery conference in London
Question
<strong>  Lydia Finney established the New York Moral Reform Society in 1834 in order to )</strong> A) criminalize prostitution B) support alcoholics C) abolish slavery D) fight for equal pay rights <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Lydia Finney established the New York Moral Reform Society in 1834 in order to
)

A) criminalize prostitution
B) support alcoholics
C) abolish slavery
D) fight for equal pay rights
Question
<strong>  How do the actions depicted in the cartoon New Method of Sorting the Mail, which shows the people of Charleston burning abolitionist materials sent through the United States Postal Department, mark a turning point between the antislavery and proslavery forces in the United States?</strong> A) Physical violence between both groups became more frequent. B) The burning of the U.S. mail made slavery a national issue instead of a local one. C) This situation led to a greater number of women joining the abolitionist movement. D) Abolitionists began to call for immediatism, rather than gradual emancipation for slaves. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
How do the actions depicted in the cartoon New Method of Sorting the Mail, which shows the people of Charleston burning abolitionist materials sent through the United States Postal Department, mark a turning point between the antislavery and proslavery forces in the United States?

A) Physical violence between both groups became more frequent.
B) The burning of the U.S. mail made slavery a national issue instead of a local one.
C) This situation led to a greater number of women joining the abolitionist movement.
D) Abolitionists began to call for immediatism, rather than gradual emancipation for slaves.
Question
<strong>    The board game The Mansion of Happiness, which is pictured on the right, was similar to the lithograph The Way of Good and Evil that is on the left in that both shared .</strong> A) a spiral design to symbolize the twists and turns of life B) a strong opposition to organized religion C) concerns about the economic changes of the market economy D) the idea that life was a journey along a path of piety and sin <div style=padding-top: 35px> <strong>    The board game The Mansion of Happiness, which is pictured on the right, was similar to the lithograph The Way of Good and Evil that is on the left in that both shared .</strong> A) a spiral design to symbolize the twists and turns of life B) a strong opposition to organized religion C) concerns about the economic changes of the market economy D) the idea that life was a journey along a path of piety and sin <div style=padding-top: 35px>
The board game "The Mansion of Happiness," which is pictured on the right, was similar to the lithograph The Way of Good and Evil that is on the left in that both shared .

A) a spiral design to symbolize the twists and turns of life
B) a strong opposition to organized religion
C) concerns about the economic changes of the market economy
D) the idea that life was a journey along a path of piety and sin
Question
<strong>  As can be seen in this painting of Mount Auburn, typical elements of the rural cemetery movement included .</strong> A) the provision of a place for reflection by the living and repose for the dead B) strong connections to the features of a market economy C) an interest in ancient Greek monuments and practices D) a rejection of Christian values <div style=padding-top: 35px>
As can be seen in this painting of Mount Auburn, typical elements of the rural cemetery movement included .

A) the provision of a place for reflection by the living and repose for the dead
B) strong connections to the features of a market economy
C) an interest in ancient Greek monuments and practices
D) a rejection of Christian values
Question
<strong>  The Symbolical Head was an image associated with the popular topic of on the Lyceum lecture circuit.</strong> A) phrenology B) racism C) psychology D) the secular utopian movement <div style=padding-top: 35px>
"The Symbolical Head" was an image associated with the popular topic of on the Lyceum lecture circuit.

A) phrenology
B) racism
C) psychology
D) the secular utopian movement
Question
<strong>    Harriet Jacobs's Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl told about .</strong> A) her long struggle to learn to write well enough to tell her story B) the sexual predations of white Southerners on black women C) events in the life of a fictional slave contented within the benevolent institution D) her journalistic investigations into the lives of female slaves <div style=padding-top: 35px> <strong>    Harriet Jacobs's Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl told about .</strong> A) her long struggle to learn to write well enough to tell her story B) the sexual predations of white Southerners on black women C) events in the life of a fictional slave contented within the benevolent institution D) her journalistic investigations into the lives of female slaves <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Harriet Jacobs's Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl told about .

A) her long struggle to learn to write well enough to tell her story
B) the sexual predations of white Southerners on black women
C) events in the life of a fictional slave contented within the "benevolent" institution
D) her journalistic investigations into the lives of female slaves
Question
<strong>  The novels written by Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman Melville both dealt with themes resulting from .</strong> A) alienation that followed from the economic changes brought by the market revolution B) support for the intellectual movements that were part of secular utopian communities C) their opposition to slavery D) their experiences of living on the high seas <div style=padding-top: 35px>
The novels written by Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman Melville both dealt with themes resulting from .

A) alienation that followed from the economic changes brought by the market revolution
B) support for the intellectual movements that were part of secular utopian communities
C) their opposition to slavery
D) their experiences of living on the high seas
Question
<strong>    These images of Greek Revival furniture on the left and Shaker furniture on the right contrast from each other because .</strong> A) utopian sects preferred fancy mainstream furniture to more ascetic furniture B) Shaker furniture was more intricate in design C) Shaker furniture was built to be functional, not fancy D) simplistic Shaker furniture was preferred by most mainstream Americans <div style=padding-top: 35px> <strong>    These images of Greek Revival furniture on the left and Shaker furniture on the right contrast from each other because .</strong> A) utopian sects preferred fancy mainstream furniture to more ascetic furniture B) Shaker furniture was more intricate in design C) Shaker furniture was built to be functional, not fancy D) simplistic Shaker furniture was preferred by most mainstream Americans <div style=padding-top: 35px>
These images of Greek Revival furniture on the left and Shaker furniture on the right contrast from each other because .

A) utopian sects preferred fancy mainstream furniture to more ascetic furniture
B) Shaker furniture was more intricate in design
C) Shaker furniture was built to be functional, not fancy
D) simplistic Shaker furniture was preferred by most mainstream Americans
Question
<strong>  As seen in this image, roads running through New York City's Central Park were intentionally sunk below the line of sight in order to .</strong> A) accommodate new modes of transportation developed during the market economy B) maintain the park's country-like setting C) imitate the type of roads used in modern European communities D) establish escape routes from the park in cases of emergencies <div style=padding-top: 35px>
As seen in this image, roads running through New York City's Central Park were intentionally sunk below the line of sight in order to .

A) accommodate new modes of transportation developed during the market economy
B) maintain the park's country-like setting
C) imitate the type of roads used in modern European communities
D) establish escape routes from the park in cases of emergencies
Question
<strong>  According to phrenologist Orson S. Fowler, what was the advantage of living in an octagon- shaped house like the one in this image?</strong> A) It was more efficient in material costs and was therefore thriftier to construct. B) It encouraged harmony by approximating the shape of a circle. C) It was a metaphor for the cycle of birth to death. D) It was focused toward heaven and so would encourage religious worship. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
According to phrenologist Orson S. Fowler, what was the advantage of living in an octagon- shaped house like the one in this image?

A) It was more efficient in material costs and was therefore thriftier to construct.
B) It encouraged harmony by approximating the shape of a circle.
C) It was a metaphor for the cycle of birth to death.
D) It was focused toward heaven and so would encourage religious worship.
Question
<strong>  By placing himself in the midst of the mountain in his painting View from Mt. Holyoke, artist Thomas Cole more than likely espoused the views of which of the following groups?</strong> A) supporters of women's rights B) abolitionists C) proponents of the market economy D) Transcendentalists <div style=padding-top: 35px>
By placing himself in the midst of the mountain in his painting View from Mt. Holyoke, artist Thomas Cole more than likely espoused the views of which of the following groups?

A) supporters of women's rights
B) abolitionists
C) proponents of the market economy
D) Transcendentalists
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Deck 10: Revivalism, Reform and Artistic Renaissance, 1820-1850
1
<strong>  How did Charles G. Finney use the tools of the market revolution to further the goals of the Second Great Awakening?</strong> A) He stressed the political message of egalitarianism found in Jacksonian democracy. B) He utilized the expanding publishing industry to distribute printed religious materials. C) He emphasized that the economic profits gained by new technology led to salvation. D) He underscored the fact that workers no longer needed to work as hard as they had done before the advent of new technology.
How did Charles G. Finney use the tools of the market revolution to further the goals of the Second Great Awakening?

A) He stressed the political message of egalitarianism found in Jacksonian democracy.
B) He utilized the expanding publishing industry to distribute printed religious materials.
C) He emphasized that the economic profits gained by new technology led to salvation.
D) He underscored the fact that workers no longer needed to work as hard as they had done before the advent of new technology.
He utilized the expanding publishing industry to distribute printed religious materials.
2
<strong>  How did changes in religious belief influence ideas about prison and punishment?</strong> A) The prison system began to cast criminal behavior in terms of sinfulness and innate depravity. B) Prisoners and the mentally ill were housed together in wretched conditions. C) Prisons became penitentiaries where prisoners had opportunities to repent and reform. D) Prisoners were given greater access to educational resources and public speaking events.
How did changes in religious belief influence ideas about prison and punishment?

A) The prison system began to cast criminal behavior in terms of sinfulness and innate depravity.
B) Prisoners and the mentally ill were housed together in wretched conditions.
C) Prisons became "penitentiaries" where prisoners had opportunities to repent and reform.
D) Prisoners were given greater access to educational resources and public speaking events.
Prisons became "penitentiaries" where prisoners had opportunities to repent and reform.
3
<strong>    Southern and Northern Democrats in the House of Representatives passed the gag rule in order to .</strong> A) stop the immediate abolition of slavery B) outlaw the internal slave trade in the United States C) automatically table and not consider antislavery petitions sent to Congress D) promote the benefits of slavery <strong>    Southern and Northern Democrats in the House of Representatives passed the gag rule in order to .</strong> A) stop the immediate abolition of slavery B) outlaw the internal slave trade in the United States C) automatically table and not consider antislavery petitions sent to Congress D) promote the benefits of slavery
Southern and Northern Democrats in the House of Representatives passed the "gag rule" in order to .

A) stop the immediate abolition of slavery
B) outlaw the internal slave trade in the United States
C) automatically table and not consider antislavery petitions sent to Congress
D) promote the benefits of slavery
automatically table and not consider antislavery petitions sent to Congress
4
<strong>  What message does the lithograph The Way of Good and Evil send to its audience?</strong> A) Americans resisted the social ills found in their society. B) A person could choose sin over good deeds and still be saved. C) Achieving an education was unnecessary to obtain salvation. D) People faced a clear choice of salvation or eternal damnation.
What message does the lithograph The Way of Good and Evil send to its audience?

A) Americans resisted the social ills found in their society.
B) A person could choose sin over good deeds and still be saved.
C) Achieving an education was unnecessary to obtain salvation.
D) People faced a clear choice of salvation or eternal damnation.
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5
<strong>  Through his newspaper The Liberator, became a leading spokesperson for immediatism.</strong> A) David Walker B) Hiram Powers C) William Lloyd Garrison D) Thomas R. Dew
Through his newspaper The Liberator, became a leading spokesperson for immediatism.

A) David Walker
B) Hiram Powers
C) William Lloyd Garrison
D) Thomas R. Dew
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6
<strong>  What was the Second Great Awakening?</strong> A) a literary movement B) a movement for political reform C) the period of recovery from an economic panic D) a religious revival
What was the Second Great Awakening?

A) a literary movement
B) a movement for political reform
C) the period of recovery from an economic panic
D) a religious revival
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7
<strong>  What ironic element found in A Militia Muster contradicts the Reverend Lyman Beecher's belief that temperance organizations were comparable to a disciplined moral militia?</strong> A) Temperance organizations were mostly made up of women. B) Militias promoted violence while temperance organizations favored peaceful messages. C) Temperance organizations excluded African Americans from membership. D) The militiamen in the image are engaged in intoxicated revelries.
What ironic element found in "A Militia Muster" contradicts the Reverend Lyman Beecher's belief that temperance organizations were comparable to "a disciplined moral militia"?

A) Temperance organizations were mostly made up of women.
B) Militias promoted violence while temperance organizations favored peaceful messages.
C) Temperance organizations excluded African Americans from membership.
D) The militiamen in the image are engaged in intoxicated revelries.
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8
<strong>  Abolitionists created jigsaw puzzles such as this one mainly to .</strong> A) educate Northern children about the evils of slavery B) entertain laborers after their long work day C) promote the African colonization movement D) annoy Southern slave owners
Abolitionists created jigsaw puzzles such as this one mainly to .

A) educate Northern children about the evils of slavery
B) entertain laborers after their long work day
C) promote the African colonization movement
D) annoy Southern slave owners
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9
<strong>  Horace Mann's most notable contributions were in the field of .</strong> A) religion B) education C) women's rights D) temperance
Horace Mann's most notable contributions were in the field of .

A) religion
B) education
C) women's rights
D) temperance
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10
<strong>  The American Colonization Society called for the transportation of free blacks to the African colony of .</strong> A) Benin B) Liberia C) Senegal D) Nigeria
The American Colonization Society called for the transportation of free blacks to the African colony of .

A) Benin
B) Liberia
C) Senegal
D) Nigeria
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11
<strong>  Early Federalist leaders like Alexander Hamilton and John Jay called for the abolition of slavery because slavery _ .</strong> A) threatened the republican values of liberty and virtue B) made the South more economically powerful than the North C) rejected the ideas of racial equality and justice D) gave the Southern states more dominance in the House of Representatives
Early Federalist leaders like Alexander Hamilton and John Jay called for the abolition of slavery because slavery _ .

A) threatened the republican values of liberty and virtue
B) made the South more economically powerful than the North
C) rejected the ideas of racial equality and justice
D) gave the Southern states more dominance in the House of Representatives
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12
<strong>  Architect John Haviland designed New York City's Halls of Justice, which were better known as the Tombs, in the Egyptian Revival style that characterized sepulchral gloom in order to .</strong> A) highlight the more successful aspects of prison reform B) link these buildings to the certain deaths that prisoners faced C) intimidate and project the power of the law D) generate greater sympathy for prisoners
Architect John Haviland designed New York City's Halls of Justice, which were better known as the "Tombs," in the Egyptian Revival style that characterized sepulchral gloom in order to .

A) highlight the more successful aspects of prison reform
B) link these buildings to the certain deaths that prisoners faced
C) intimidate and project the power of the law
D) generate greater sympathy for prisoners
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13
<strong>  Angelina and Sarah Grimké were unique from other abolitionists because .</strong> A) few women were involved in the abolitionist movement B) they were the daughters of a wealthy Southern planter C) they convinced Quakers to join the antislavery movement D) American women were more sympathetic to the proslavery movement
Angelina and Sarah Grimké were unique from other abolitionists because .

A) few women were involved in the abolitionist movement
B) they were the daughters of a wealthy Southern planter
C) they convinced Quakers to join the antislavery movement
D) American women were more sympathetic to the proslavery movement
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14
<strong>  What aspect of religious revivalism is evoked in this painting of a camp meeting?</strong> A) the gentility of its attendees B) its small size C) its emotional intensity D) the diversity of its attendees
What aspect of religious revivalism is evoked in this painting of a camp meeting?

A) the gentility of its attendees
B) its small size
C) its emotional intensity
D) the diversity of its attendees
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15
<strong>  How was Charles Grandison Finney's theology of perfectionism different from pre-existing Calvinist beliefs?</strong> A) Perfectionism stressed that people could achieve their own salvation through free will. B) Under the theology of perfectionism, most people were condemned to damnation from birth. C) Perfectionism could only be achieved if one was poor and humble. D) Perfectionist doctrine stated that only God determined individuals' destinies.
How was Charles Grandison Finney's theology of perfectionism different from pre-existing Calvinist beliefs?

A) Perfectionism stressed that people could achieve their own salvation through free will.
B) Under the theology of perfectionism, most people were condemned to damnation from birth.
C) Perfectionism could only be achieved if one was poor and humble.
D) Perfectionist doctrine stated that only God determined individuals' destinies.
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16
<strong>    Former slave Henry Box Brown, the central figure in this image, attracted many supporters of abolition to his speaking engagements because he .</strong> A) mailed himself to freedom in a box B) hid in a box while Southern patrollers searched for him C) spoke from the top of a box at his events D) used boxes to ship other slaves to freedom in the North <strong>    Former slave Henry Box Brown, the central figure in this image, attracted many supporters of abolition to his speaking engagements because he .</strong> A) mailed himself to freedom in a box B) hid in a box while Southern patrollers searched for him C) spoke from the top of a box at his events D) used boxes to ship other slaves to freedom in the North
Former slave Henry "Box" Brown, the central figure in this image, attracted many supporters of abolition to his speaking engagements because he .

A) mailed himself to freedom in a box
B) hid in a box while Southern patrollers searched for him
C) spoke from the top of a box at his events
D) used boxes to ship other slaves to freedom in the North
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17
<strong>  When the Manifesto of the Washington Total Abstinence Societies that was written in 1841 stated that We hold these truths to be self-evident; that all men are created temperate; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain natural and innocent desires; that among them are the appetite for cold water and the pursuit of happiness!, its members were addressing abstinence from .</strong> A) consummating sexual relations B) consuming unhealthy foods C) imbibing alcoholic beverages D) participating in events such as dueling and gambling
When the Manifesto of the Washington Total Abstinence Societies that was written in 1841 stated that "We hold these truths to be self-evident; that all men are created temperate; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain natural and innocent desires; that among them are the appetite for cold water and the pursuit of happiness!", its members were addressing abstinence from .

A) consummating sexual relations
B) consuming unhealthy foods
C) imbibing alcoholic beverages
D) participating in events such as dueling and gambling
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18
<strong>  How did David Walker, a free black abolitionist, change other abolitionists' views on slavery when he published an Appeal?</strong> A) He stressed the need for violent slave insurrections. B) He gained more support from Southern intellectuals for African colonization. C) He convinced other abolitionists that emancipation should be immediate, not gradual. D) He made abolitionism a religious movement linked to humane treatment for the first time.
How did David Walker, a free black abolitionist, change other abolitionists' views on slavery when he published an Appeal?

A) He stressed the need for violent slave insurrections.
B) He gained more support from Southern intellectuals for African colonization.
C) He convinced other abolitionists that emancipation should be immediate, not gradual.
D) He made abolitionism a religious movement linked to humane treatment for the first time.
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19
<strong>  The push for more humane treatment of the mentally ill was promoted by .</strong> A) Lyman Beecher B) Horace Mann C) Elizabeth Cady Stanton D) Dorothea Dix
The push for more humane treatment of the mentally ill was promoted by .

A) Lyman Beecher
B) Horace Mann
C) Elizabeth Cady Stanton
D) Dorothea Dix
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20
<strong>  The belief that people should let the Common School be expanded to its capabilities…and nine tenths of the crimes in the penal code would become obsolete; the long catalogue of human ills would be abridged, reflects the idea that universal public education was a style of reform.</strong> A) preventive B) curative C) remedial D) utopian
The belief that people should "let the Common School be expanded to its capabilities…and nine tenths of the crimes in the penal code would become obsolete; the long catalogue of human ills would be abridged," reflects the idea that universal public education was a style of reform.

A) preventive
B) curative
C) remedial
D) utopian
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21
<strong>  Mormonism was first established in Palmyra, New York by _.</strong> A) Mary Cragin B) Francis Wright C) Joseph Smith D) Robert Owen
Mormonism was first established in Palmyra, New York by _.

A) Mary Cragin
B) Francis Wright
C) Joseph Smith
D) Robert Owen
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22
<strong>  Secular utopian communities such as those in New Harmony, Indiana, and those organized by Charles Fourier were the result of .</strong> A) hostility to the market revolution B) openness to multiple sexual relationships C) opposition to slavery D) a desire for intellectual improvement
Secular utopian communities such as those in New Harmony, Indiana, and those organized by Charles Fourier were the result of .

A) hostility to the market revolution
B) openness to multiple sexual relationships
C) opposition to slavery
D) a desire for intellectual improvement
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23
<strong>  What popular attitude toward the Millerite movement is reflected in this illustration?</strong> A) admiration for preparing for the apocalypse B) criticism of its inclination to isolate each other from society C) mockery of its expectation of the apocalypse D) ridicule of the group's excessive thrift
What popular attitude toward the Millerite movement is reflected in this illustration?

A) admiration for preparing for the apocalypse
B) criticism of its inclination to isolate each other from society
C) mockery of its expectation of the apocalypse
D) ridicule of the group's excessive thrift
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24
<strong>  The Seneca Falls Convention of 1848 was a turning point in women's history in the United States because it was the start of .</strong> A) women's participation in the abolitionist movement B) the women's rights movement C) the temperance movement D) married women having greater control over their property
The Seneca Falls Convention of 1848 was a turning point in women's history in the United States because it was the start of .

A) women's participation in the abolitionist movement
B) the women's rights movement
C) the temperance movement
D) married women having greater control over their property
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25
<strong>  The Bloomer costume was initially designed so that women could .</strong> A) enhance the female figure B) have a proper uniform for factory work C) secure freedom from oppressive fashions such as the corset D) become involved in their movement for greater equality
The Bloomer costume was initially designed so that women could .

A) enhance the female figure
B) have a proper uniform for factory work
C) secure freedom from oppressive fashions such as the corset
D) become involved in their movement for greater equality
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26
<strong>  In her painting Domestic Happiness, artist Lily Martin Spencer intends for the woman's hand gesture to communicate both her emotional intimacy with her husband and her .</strong> A) subtle power over him B) sexual desire for him C) wish to protect their children from him D) dominion over the world of their children
In her painting Domestic Happiness, artist Lily Martin Spencer intends for the woman's hand gesture to communicate both her emotional intimacy with her husband and her .

A) subtle power over him
B) sexual desire for him
C) wish to protect their children from him
D) dominion over the world of their children
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27
<strong>  This image of a Shaker religious dance emphasizes their belief in .</strong> A) rejection of the values of the marketplace B) communal ownership of property C) the adoption of orphans D) equality among the sexes
This image of a Shaker religious dance emphasizes their belief in .

A) rejection of the values of the marketplace
B) communal ownership of property
C) the adoption of orphans
D) equality among the sexes
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28
<strong>  The teachings of Mother Ann Lee were the foundation for the establishment of .</strong> A) Shakerism B) Quakerism C) abolitionism D) millennialism
The teachings of Mother Ann Lee were the foundation for the establishment of .

A) Shakerism
B) Quakerism
C) abolitionism
D) millennialism
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29
<strong>  In his Review of the Debate in the Virginia Legislature of 1831 and 1832, Professor Thomas R.Dew .</strong> A) affirmed Thomas Jefferson's earlier idea that slavery was unjust B) called for the immediate abolition of slavery in the United States C) defended the property rights of slaveholders D) supported the relocation of Virginia's slaves to Africa
In his Review of the Debate in the Virginia Legislature of 1831 and 1832, Professor Thomas R.Dew .

A) affirmed Thomas Jefferson's earlier idea that slavery was unjust
B) called for the immediate abolition of slavery in the United States
C) defended the property rights of slaveholders
D) supported the relocation of Virginia's slaves to Africa
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30
<strong>  How does the proslavery cartoon Slavery As It Exists in America affirm John C. Calhoun's apologist views on the peculiar institution of slavery?</strong> A) Slavery was a harsher system than the factory system in the North. B) Slavery was a positive good sanctioned by the Bible and ancient philosophers. C) Slavery benefitted the entire nation due to its profitable success in commercialized farming. D) Slavery improved both the physical and moral lives of African Americans.
How does the proslavery cartoon Slavery As It Exists in America affirm John C. Calhoun's apologist views on the "peculiar institution" of slavery?

A) Slavery was a harsher system than the factory system in the North.
B) Slavery was a positive good sanctioned by the Bible and ancient philosophers.
C) Slavery benefitted the entire nation due to its profitable success in commercialized farming.
D) Slavery improved both the physical and moral lives of African Americans.
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31
<strong>  The philosophy of Transcendentalism relied on for insights and inspiration.</strong> A) the market economy B) the abolition of slavery C) nature D) traditional religion
The philosophy of Transcendentalism relied on for insights and inspiration.

A) the market economy
B) the abolition of slavery
C) nature
D) traditional religion
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32
<strong>  What was complex marriage as practiced in the community at Oneida, New York, that was established by John Humphrey Noyes?</strong> A) the polygamy that predominated among families within the community B) communal property ownership among members of the community C) a system of arranged marriages between members of the community D) free sexual relations between the men and women of the community
What was complex marriage as practiced in the community at Oneida, New York, that was established by John Humphrey Noyes?

A) the polygamy that predominated among families within the community
B) communal property ownership among members of the community
C) a system of arranged marriages between members of the community
D) free sexual relations between the men and women of the community
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33
<strong>  Such reformers as Mary Gove and Paulina Wright were interested in .</strong> A) fighting for women's property rights B) encouraging sexual passivity and chastity among women C) liberating fallen women from their work in brothels D) educating women on their reproductive rights and health
Such reformers as Mary Gove and Paulina Wright were interested in .

A) fighting for women's property rights
B) encouraging sexual passivity and chastity among women
C) liberating "fallen women" from their work in brothels
D) educating women on their reproductive rights and health
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34
<strong>  This map showing the location of both secular and religious utopian communities in the United States reveals that .</strong> A) the Mormons were a sedentary sect B) the South was not as receptive to these communities as the North C) the mid-Atlantic seacoast was a hotbed of utopian reform D) there were more Shaker communities in the Midwest than New England
This map showing the location of both secular and religious utopian communities in the United States reveals that .

A) the Mormons were a sedentary sect
B) the South was not as receptive to these communities as the North
C) the mid-Atlantic seacoast was a hotbed of utopian reform
D) there were more Shaker communities in the Midwest than New England
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35
<strong>  What is millennialism?</strong> A) the belief that God has condemned humanity B) the belief that Judgment Day is imminent C) the belief in one's own salvation D) the belief that Americans have a special relationship with God
What is millennialism?

A) the belief that God has condemned humanity
B) the belief that Judgment Day is imminent
C) the belief in one's own salvation
D) the belief that Americans have a special relationship with God
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36
<strong>  What values were associated with the cult of true womanhood?</strong> A) egalitarianism with their male counterparts B) piety, motherhood, and sexual passivity C) the importance of being consumers in the competitive marketplace D) women's weaknesses and tendencies toward moral depravity
What values were associated with the "cult of true womanhood"?

A) egalitarianism with their male counterparts
B) piety, motherhood, and sexual passivity
C) the importance of being consumers in the competitive marketplace
D) women's weaknesses and tendencies toward moral depravity
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37
<strong>  Although Hiram Powers's sculpture The Greek Slave stirred up Northern sympathies against slavery, this sculpture also appealed to Southerners because it .</strong> A) compared the plight of ancient Greek slaves to Southern slaves B) shocked society with its nude depiction of the slave C) raised sympathy with contemporary Greece, which was in a republican revolution against their Turkish oppressors D) praised Christian values that were symbolized by her crucifix
Although Hiram Powers's sculpture The Greek Slave stirred up Northern sympathies against slavery, this sculpture also appealed to Southerners because it .

A) compared the plight of ancient Greek slaves to Southern slaves
B) shocked society with its nude depiction of the slave
C) raised sympathy with contemporary Greece, which was in a republican revolution against their Turkish oppressors
D) praised Christian values that were symbolized by her crucifix
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38
<strong>  What event led Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton to focus their attention on the oppression of women?</strong> A) the introduction by Thomas Herttell of a bill to grant property rights to women B) the success they found in their work on the temperance movement C) the imposition of coverture laws restricting a woman's rights D) the restrictions they faced at the international antislavery conference in London
What event led Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton to focus their attention on the oppression of women?

A) the introduction by Thomas Herttell of a bill to grant property rights to women
B) the success they found in their work on the temperance movement
C) the imposition of coverture laws restricting a woman's rights
D) the restrictions they faced at the international antislavery conference in London
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39
<strong>  Lydia Finney established the New York Moral Reform Society in 1834 in order to )</strong> A) criminalize prostitution B) support alcoholics C) abolish slavery D) fight for equal pay rights
Lydia Finney established the New York Moral Reform Society in 1834 in order to
)

A) criminalize prostitution
B) support alcoholics
C) abolish slavery
D) fight for equal pay rights
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40
<strong>  How do the actions depicted in the cartoon New Method of Sorting the Mail, which shows the people of Charleston burning abolitionist materials sent through the United States Postal Department, mark a turning point between the antislavery and proslavery forces in the United States?</strong> A) Physical violence between both groups became more frequent. B) The burning of the U.S. mail made slavery a national issue instead of a local one. C) This situation led to a greater number of women joining the abolitionist movement. D) Abolitionists began to call for immediatism, rather than gradual emancipation for slaves.
How do the actions depicted in the cartoon New Method of Sorting the Mail, which shows the people of Charleston burning abolitionist materials sent through the United States Postal Department, mark a turning point between the antislavery and proslavery forces in the United States?

A) Physical violence between both groups became more frequent.
B) The burning of the U.S. mail made slavery a national issue instead of a local one.
C) This situation led to a greater number of women joining the abolitionist movement.
D) Abolitionists began to call for immediatism, rather than gradual emancipation for slaves.
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41
<strong>    The board game The Mansion of Happiness, which is pictured on the right, was similar to the lithograph The Way of Good and Evil that is on the left in that both shared .</strong> A) a spiral design to symbolize the twists and turns of life B) a strong opposition to organized religion C) concerns about the economic changes of the market economy D) the idea that life was a journey along a path of piety and sin <strong>    The board game The Mansion of Happiness, which is pictured on the right, was similar to the lithograph The Way of Good and Evil that is on the left in that both shared .</strong> A) a spiral design to symbolize the twists and turns of life B) a strong opposition to organized religion C) concerns about the economic changes of the market economy D) the idea that life was a journey along a path of piety and sin
The board game "The Mansion of Happiness," which is pictured on the right, was similar to the lithograph The Way of Good and Evil that is on the left in that both shared .

A) a spiral design to symbolize the twists and turns of life
B) a strong opposition to organized religion
C) concerns about the economic changes of the market economy
D) the idea that life was a journey along a path of piety and sin
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42
<strong>  As can be seen in this painting of Mount Auburn, typical elements of the rural cemetery movement included .</strong> A) the provision of a place for reflection by the living and repose for the dead B) strong connections to the features of a market economy C) an interest in ancient Greek monuments and practices D) a rejection of Christian values
As can be seen in this painting of Mount Auburn, typical elements of the rural cemetery movement included .

A) the provision of a place for reflection by the living and repose for the dead
B) strong connections to the features of a market economy
C) an interest in ancient Greek monuments and practices
D) a rejection of Christian values
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43
<strong>  The Symbolical Head was an image associated with the popular topic of on the Lyceum lecture circuit.</strong> A) phrenology B) racism C) psychology D) the secular utopian movement
"The Symbolical Head" was an image associated with the popular topic of on the Lyceum lecture circuit.

A) phrenology
B) racism
C) psychology
D) the secular utopian movement
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44
<strong>    Harriet Jacobs's Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl told about .</strong> A) her long struggle to learn to write well enough to tell her story B) the sexual predations of white Southerners on black women C) events in the life of a fictional slave contented within the benevolent institution D) her journalistic investigations into the lives of female slaves <strong>    Harriet Jacobs's Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl told about .</strong> A) her long struggle to learn to write well enough to tell her story B) the sexual predations of white Southerners on black women C) events in the life of a fictional slave contented within the benevolent institution D) her journalistic investigations into the lives of female slaves
Harriet Jacobs's Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl told about .

A) her long struggle to learn to write well enough to tell her story
B) the sexual predations of white Southerners on black women
C) events in the life of a fictional slave contented within the "benevolent" institution
D) her journalistic investigations into the lives of female slaves
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45
<strong>  The novels written by Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman Melville both dealt with themes resulting from .</strong> A) alienation that followed from the economic changes brought by the market revolution B) support for the intellectual movements that were part of secular utopian communities C) their opposition to slavery D) their experiences of living on the high seas
The novels written by Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman Melville both dealt with themes resulting from .

A) alienation that followed from the economic changes brought by the market revolution
B) support for the intellectual movements that were part of secular utopian communities
C) their opposition to slavery
D) their experiences of living on the high seas
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46
<strong>    These images of Greek Revival furniture on the left and Shaker furniture on the right contrast from each other because .</strong> A) utopian sects preferred fancy mainstream furniture to more ascetic furniture B) Shaker furniture was more intricate in design C) Shaker furniture was built to be functional, not fancy D) simplistic Shaker furniture was preferred by most mainstream Americans <strong>    These images of Greek Revival furniture on the left and Shaker furniture on the right contrast from each other because .</strong> A) utopian sects preferred fancy mainstream furniture to more ascetic furniture B) Shaker furniture was more intricate in design C) Shaker furniture was built to be functional, not fancy D) simplistic Shaker furniture was preferred by most mainstream Americans
These images of Greek Revival furniture on the left and Shaker furniture on the right contrast from each other because .

A) utopian sects preferred fancy mainstream furniture to more ascetic furniture
B) Shaker furniture was more intricate in design
C) Shaker furniture was built to be functional, not fancy
D) simplistic Shaker furniture was preferred by most mainstream Americans
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47
<strong>  As seen in this image, roads running through New York City's Central Park were intentionally sunk below the line of sight in order to .</strong> A) accommodate new modes of transportation developed during the market economy B) maintain the park's country-like setting C) imitate the type of roads used in modern European communities D) establish escape routes from the park in cases of emergencies
As seen in this image, roads running through New York City's Central Park were intentionally sunk below the line of sight in order to .

A) accommodate new modes of transportation developed during the market economy
B) maintain the park's country-like setting
C) imitate the type of roads used in modern European communities
D) establish escape routes from the park in cases of emergencies
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48
<strong>  According to phrenologist Orson S. Fowler, what was the advantage of living in an octagon- shaped house like the one in this image?</strong> A) It was more efficient in material costs and was therefore thriftier to construct. B) It encouraged harmony by approximating the shape of a circle. C) It was a metaphor for the cycle of birth to death. D) It was focused toward heaven and so would encourage religious worship.
According to phrenologist Orson S. Fowler, what was the advantage of living in an octagon- shaped house like the one in this image?

A) It was more efficient in material costs and was therefore thriftier to construct.
B) It encouraged harmony by approximating the shape of a circle.
C) It was a metaphor for the cycle of birth to death.
D) It was focused toward heaven and so would encourage religious worship.
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49
<strong>  By placing himself in the midst of the mountain in his painting View from Mt. Holyoke, artist Thomas Cole more than likely espoused the views of which of the following groups?</strong> A) supporters of women's rights B) abolitionists C) proponents of the market economy D) Transcendentalists
By placing himself in the midst of the mountain in his painting View from Mt. Holyoke, artist Thomas Cole more than likely espoused the views of which of the following groups?

A) supporters of women's rights
B) abolitionists
C) proponents of the market economy
D) Transcendentalists
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 49 flashcards in this deck.