Asked by Jass
it takes one of the great advantages of being a woman that one can pass even a very fine Negress without wishing to man an English woman of her?
Which of the following choices correctly explains the meaning behind this line?
Women don't find black women as attractive, as men do
Women don't have the same need as men to go unnoticed in the world
Women don't have the same need as men to leave some sort of lasting impression in the world <-- or B
White women and black women in England often experienced conflict
Which of the following choices correctly explains the meaning behind this line?
Women don't find black women as attractive, as men do
Women don't have the same need as men to go unnoticed in the world
Women don't have the same need as men to leave some sort of lasting impression in the world <-- or B
White women and black women in England often experienced conflict
Answers
Answered by
Reed
I think there's a better answer.
Answered by
Jass
D? I'm unsure now if it's not B or C
Answered by
Jass
Is it D?
Answered by
Reed
If there is an advantage to being a woman AS OPPOSED TO BEING A MAN, it's that women don't want to make black women into Englishwomen? Why would a man want to make a black woman ("negress") into an Englishwoman? (As if she wasn't already?) White men find black women more attractive than white women do and wish to elevate them to a status equal to white women?
I don't know the source of this quotation, but it must be old. The implication that black women are inferior to white women is repulsive, but once was popular.
I don't know the source of this quotation, but it must be old. The implication that black women are inferior to white women is repulsive, but once was popular.
Answered by
Writeacher
Is there a typo (or maybe two) in that original question? It doesn't make sense to me.
Answered by
Jass
This is from Virgina Woolf's Shakespeare's Sister.... and sorry I thought I typed it correctly!!!
" It is one of the great advantages of being a woman that one can pass even a very fine Negress without wishing to make an Englishwoman of her"
" It is one of the great advantages of being a woman that one can pass even a very fine Negress without wishing to make an Englishwoman of her"
Answered by
Jass
I'm so lost by what she mean by this. I keep reading it over and over.
Answered by
Jass
Found an article that explains it and I THINK it's between B or C
Answered by
Jass
"For, as Woolf well knows, no man of her era passing “a very fine negress” actually wishes to make an Englishwoman of her. Women of color in English society would definitely have been looked at with possessive eyes, but those eyes greedily wished to use those women for their own purposes: Servants, sex workers, slaves.
In asserting this “great advantage of being a woman,” Woolf also asserts a belief that women do not participate in the world of possession—perhaps a fair and true belief in her 20th-century milieu of recent women’s suffrage, where women had only ceased being their husband’s chattel by a handful of decades"
In asserting this “great advantage of being a woman,” Woolf also asserts a belief that women do not participate in the world of possession—perhaps a fair and true belief in her 20th-century milieu of recent women’s suffrage, where women had only ceased being their husband’s chattel by a handful of decades"
Answered by
Jass
10/10 :D i was correct
Answered by
Reed
In context, yes, you were right. Out of context, the quotation could have easily meant something different.
Answered by
Nina
definitely D (making a lasting impression). This quote is by Virginia Woolf and it’s from the early 1900s. I also don’t see it as referring to the black woman as lesser than a white Englishwoman, just different. Not only in outward appearance but the way they’re treated. It makes a lot of sense in context of the essay.
Answered by
Devika
D seems a bit close than the rest. I understand it as both are treated differently but not better(desirably/rightly). The sentence "It is one of the great advantages of being a woman that one can pass even a very fine negress without wishing to MAKE an Englishwoman of her" Being a women/Englishwomen she doesn't think it would make that big a difference and thus wouldn't wish it on another. Men might for their own reasons.
Answered by
Gianny
It’s C. A it’s just nonsense, it can’t be B because Woolf has tried all her essay to explain that men need to be grand and recognised and that women are the ones who often hide in anonymity, not the other way around. And there’s not evidence whatsoever in her essay that leads to answer D so there you have it.