(A) accepting women as intellectual equals of men
(B) idealizing the home as a haven in a competitive world
(C) designating the home as the appropriate place for a woman
(D) emphasizing childrearing as a prime duty of a woman
(E) establishing a moral climate in the home
BrookeEnlightened
(A) accepting women as intellectual equals of men. The development of the early nineteenth-century concept of “separate spheres” for the sexes encouraged idealizing the home as a haven in a competitive world, designating the home as the appropriate place for a woman, emphasizing childrearing as a prRead more
(A) accepting women as intellectual equals of men.
The development of the early nineteenth-century concept of “separate spheres” for the sexes encouraged idealizing the home as a haven in a competitive world, designating the home as the appropriate place for a woman, emphasizing childrearing as a prime duty of a woman, and establishing a moral climate in the home except accepting women as intellectual equals of men.
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