For years scholars have contrasted slavery in the United States and in Brazil, stimulated by the fact that racial patterns assumed such different aspects in the two countries after emancipation. Brazil never developed a system of rigid segregation of the sort that replaced slavery in the United States, and its racial system was fluid (a situation that is fluid is likely to change) because its definition of race was based as much on characteristics such as economic status as on skin color. Until recently, the most persuasive explanation for these differences was that Portuguese institutions especially the Roman Catholic church and Roman civil law, promoted recognition of the slave"s humanity. The English colonists, on the other hand, constructed their system of slavery out of whole cloth (whole cloth: pure fabrication usually used in the phrase out of whole cloth). There were simply no precedents in English common law, and separation of church and state barred Protestant clergy from the role that priests assumed in Brazil.But the assumption that institutions alone could so powerfully affect the history of two raw and malleable frontier a new field for exploitative or developmental activity. Countries seem, on reexamination, untenable. Recent studies focus instead on a particular set of contrasting economic circumstances and demographic profiles at significant periods in the histories of the two countries. Persons of mixed race quickly appeared in both countries. In the United States they were considered to be Black, a social definition that was feasible because they were in the minority. In Brazil, it was not feasible. Though intermarriage was illegal in both countries, the laws were unenforceable in Brazil since Whites formed a small minority in an overwhelmingly Black population. Manumission for persons of mixed race was also easier in Brazil, particularly in the nineteenth century when in the United States it was hedged about with difficulties. Furthermore, a shortage of skilled workers in Brazil provided persons ofmixed race with the opportunity to learn crafts and trades, even before general emancipation, whereas in the United States entry into these occupations was blocked by Whites sufficiently numerous to fill the posts. The consequence was the development in Brazil of a large class of persons of mixed race, proficient in skilled trades and crafts, who stood waiting as a community for freed slaves to join.There should be no illusion that Brazilian society after emancipation was color-blind. Rather, the large population of persons of mixed race produced a racial system that included a third status, a bridge between the Black caste and the White, which could be traversed by means of economic or intellectual achievement, marriage, or racial heritage. The strict and sharp line between the races so characteristic of the United States in the years immediately after emancipation was simply absent. With the possible exception of New Orleans, no special "place" developed in the United States for persons of mixed race. Sad to say, every pressure of society worked to prevent their attaining anything approximating the economic and social position available to their counterparts in Brazil. The author mentions intermarriage, manumission, and the shortage of skilled workers in Brazil primarily in order to establish which of the following
A. The environment in which Brazil"s racial system developed
B. The influence of different legal and economic conditions in Brazil and the United States on the life-style of persons of mixed race
C. The origins of Brazil"s large class of free skilled persons of mixed race
D. The differences between treatment of slaves in Brazil and in the United States
查看答案
Who won the World Cup 1994 football game What happened at the United Nations How did the critics like the new play 1 an event takes place, newspapers are on the street 2 the details. 3 anything happens in the world, reporters are on the spot to gather the news.Newspapers have one basic 4 , to get the news as quickly as possible from its source, from those who make it to those who want to 5 it.Radio, telegraph, television, and 6 inventions brought competition for newspapers. So did the development of magazines and other means of communication. 7 , this competition merely spurred the newspapers on. They quickly made use of the newer and faster means of communication to improve the 8 and thus the efficiency of their own operations. Today more newspapers are 9 and read than ever before. Competition also led newspapers to 10 out into many other fields. Besides keeping readers informed of the latest news, today"s newspapers entertain and influence readers about politics and other important and serious 11 .Newspapers influence readers" economic choices 12 advertising. Most newspapers depend on advertising for their very 13 .Newspapers are sold at a price that 14 even a small fraction of the cost of production. The main 15 of income for most newspapers is commercial advertising. The 16 in selling advertising depends newspaper"s value to advertisers. This 17 in terms of circulation. How many people read the newspaperCirculation depends 18 on the work of the circulation department and on the services or entertainment 19 in a newspaper"s pages. But for the most part, circulation depends on a newspaper"s value to readers as a source of information 20 the community, city, county, state, nation and world—and even outer space.
A. spread
B. passed
C. printed
D. completed
Who won the World Cup 1994 football game What happened at the United Nations How did the critics like the new play 1 an event takes place, newspapers are on the street 2 the details. 3 anything happens in the world, reporters are on the spot to gather the news.Newspapers have one basic 4 , to get the news as quickly as possible from its source, from those who make it to those who want to 5 it.Radio, telegraph, television, and 6 inventions brought competition for newspapers. So did the development of magazines and other means of communication. 7 , this competition merely spurred the newspapers on. They quickly made use of the newer and faster means of communication to improve the 8 and thus the efficiency of their own operations. Today more newspapers are 9 and read than ever before. Competition also led newspapers to 10 out into many other fields. Besides keeping readers informed of the latest news, today"s newspapers entertain and influence readers about politics and other important and serious 11 .Newspapers influence readers" economic choices 12 advertising. Most newspapers depend on advertising for their very 13 .Newspapers are sold at a price that 14 even a small fraction of the cost of production. The main 15 of income for most newspapers is commercial advertising. The 16 in selling advertising depends newspaper"s value to advertisers. This 17 in terms of circulation. How many people read the newspaperCirculation depends 18 on the work of the circulation department and on the services or entertainment 19 in a newspaper"s pages. But for the most part, circulation depends on a newspaper"s value to readers as a source of information 20 the community, city, county, state, nation and world—and even outer space.
A. on
B. through
C. with
D. of
Medievalists usually distinguish medieval public law from private law: the former was concerned with government and military affairs and the latter with the family, social status, and land transactions. Examination on medieval women"s lives shows this distinction to be overly simplistic. Although medieval women were legally excluded from roles that categorized as public, such as solider, justice, jury member, or professional administrative official, women"s control of land—usually considered a private or domestic phenomenon—had important political implications in the feudal system of thirteenth- century England. Since land equaled wealth and wealth equaled power, certain women exercised influence by controlling land. Unlike unmarried women who were legally subject to their guardians or married women who had no legal identity separate from their husbands, women who were widows had autonomy with respect to acquiring or disposing of certain property, suing in court, incurring liability for their own debts, and making wills.Although feudal lands were normally transferred through primogeniture (the eldest son inheriting all), when no sons survived, the surviving daughters inherited equal shares under what was known as partible inheritance. In addition to controlling any such land inherited from her parents and any bridal dowry—property a woman brought to the marriage from her own family—a widow was entitled to use of one-third of her late husband"s lands. Called "dower" in England, this grant had greater legal importance under common law than did the bridal dowry; no marriage was legal unless the groom endowed the bride with this property at the wedding ceremony. In 1215 Magna Carta (The charter of English political and civil liberties granted by King John at Runnymede in June 1215) guaranteed a widow"s fight to claim her dower without paying a fine; this document also strengthened widow"s ability to control land by prohibiting forced remarriage. After 1272 women could also benefit from jointure: the groom could agree to hold part or all of his lands jointly with the bride, so that if one spouse died, the other received these lands.Since many widows had inheritances as well as dowers, widows were frequently the financial heads of the family; even though legal theory assumed the maintenance of the principle of primogeniture, the amount of land the widow controlled could exceed that of her son or of other male heirs. Anyone who held feudal land exercised authority over the people attached to the land—knights, rental tenants, and peasants—and had to hire estate administrators, oversee accounts, receive rents, protect tenants from outside encroachment, punish tenants for not paying rents, appoint priests to local parishes, and act as guardians of tenants" children and executors of their wills. Many married women fulfilled these duties as deputies for husbands away at court or at war, but widows could act on their own behalf. Widow"s legal independence is suggested by their frequent appearance in thirteenth-century English legal records. Moreover, the scope of their sway (3. a: a controlling influence b: sovereign power: DOMINION c: the ability to exercise influence or authority: DOMINANCE; synonyms see POWER.) is indicated by the fact that some controlled not merely single estates, but multiple counties. Which one of the following most accurately describes the function of the second paragraph of the passage
A. Providing examples of specific historical events as support for the conclusion drawn in the third paragraph
B. Narrating a sequence of events whose outcomes discussed in the third paragraph
C. Explaining how circumstances described in the first paragraph could have occurred
Describing the effects of an event mentioned in the first paragraph
Who won the World Cup 1994 football game What happened at the United Nations How did the critics like the new play 1 an event takes place, newspapers are on the street 2 the details. 3 anything happens in the world, reporters are on the spot to gather the news.Newspapers have one basic 4 , to get the news as quickly as possible from its source, from those who make it to those who want to 5 it.Radio, telegraph, television, and 6 inventions brought competition for newspapers. So did the development of magazines and other means of communication. 7 , this competition merely spurred the newspapers on. They quickly made use of the newer and faster means of communication to improve the 8 and thus the efficiency of their own operations. Today more newspapers are 9 and read than ever before. Competition also led newspapers to 10 out into many other fields. Besides keeping readers informed of the latest news, today"s newspapers entertain and influence readers about politics and other important and serious 11 .Newspapers influence readers" economic choices 12 advertising. Most newspapers depend on advertising for their very 13 .Newspapers are sold at a price that 14 even a small fraction of the cost of production. The main 15 of income for most newspapers is commercial advertising. The 16 in selling advertising depends newspaper"s value to advertisers. This 17 in terms of circulation. How many people read the newspaperCirculation depends 18 on the work of the circulation department and on the services or entertainment 19 in a newspaper"s pages. But for the most part, circulation depends on a newspaper"s value to readers as a source of information 20 the community, city, county, state, nation and world—and even outer space.
A. However
B. And
C. Therefore
D. So