Answer:
Both were a response to the social and economic conditions that developed in Europe because the industrial revolution brought unsafe working conditions for factory workers. In addition, the gap between the rich and the working class grew.
Answer:
“The revolutionary moment was neither radical nor a watershed for American women. Those who disregard
America’s commitment to patriarchal rule and plead for a historical interpretation that favors enlightened
exceptionalism have overlooked the conditions that made large-scale change all but impossible at that time
and place.”
Elaine Forman Crane, historian, Ebb Tide in New England: Women, Seaports, and Social Change, 1630–1800,
published in 1998
“The coming of the American Revolution . . . created new opportunities for women to participate in politics.
Responding to men’s appeals, women engaged in a variety of actions in support of the revolutionary cause,
which led women to experience a greater sense of connection to and involvement with the polity. After the war
their political contributions were praised, celebrated, and remembered. . . .Women now were seen as political
beings who had the capacity to influence the course of war, politics, and history.
Explanation: