3. At the end of his speech before the Senate in 1918, Woodrow Wilson argued that woman suffrage was necessary because “it is vital to the right solution of the great problems which we must settle, and settle immediately, when the war is over. We shall need in our vision affairs, as we have never needed them before, the sympathy and insight and clear moral instinct of the women of the world. . . .We shall need their moral sense to preserve what is right and fine and worthy in our system of life as well as to discover just what it is that ought to be purified and reformed.” Which of the following summarizes Wilson’s assumptions about women in this statement advocating woman suffrage?
Correct. The answer is D. In this statement, Wilson was building on the nineteenth-century notion that women were pious, pure, moral, and domestic. He suggests that these characteristics gave women a vital role to play in the process of reforming the modern urban and industrial society. His conclusion accepted the idea that women’s instinctive morality and purity would be important in setting a new direction for the world after the war.
Incorrect. The correct answer is D. In this statement, Wilson was building on the nineteenth-century notion that women were pious, pure, moral, and domestic. He suggests that these characteristics gave women a vital role to play in the process of reforming the modern urban and industrial society. His conclusion accepted the idea that women’s instinctive morality and purity would be important in setting a new direction for the world after the war.