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University Class Assignment Social Impacts of Market Revolution.edited.docx 53659 99091 Document Details Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329 Submission Date Dec 23, 2023, 4:51 PM UTC Download Date Dec 23, 2023, 4:51 PM UTC File Name AgADTREAAiF8OVA File Size 19.1 KB 5 Pages 688 Words 4,185 Characters Page 1 of 7 - Cover Page Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329 Page 1 of 7 - Cover Page Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329
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1 Social Impacts of the Market Revolution Name Institution Course Instructor Due Date Page 3 of 7 - AI Writing Submission Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329 Page 3 of 7 - AI Writing Submission Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329
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2 Social Impacts of the Market Revolution The Market Revolution of this past century in the United States triggered profound changes in social and economic institutions. This era saw the transformation of their agrarian and craft-based economies into industrial market economics. These changes led to various reform movements in reaction to the social problems and injustices generated by the Market Revolution. The major reform movements included anti-slavery, women's rights, education, and labor. Industrialization and the market economy began in earnest, making social as well as moral conflict over slavery more intense than it had ever previously been. The various abolitionist movements included the many groups that formed societies like America's American Anti-Slavery Society, founded by William Lloyd Garrison in 1833 and demanded the immediate freeing of enslaved people with equal rights to all citizens given to African Americans (Sinha, 2019). In addition, the major counterattack against this oppressive organization was an underground Railroad. It dug hidden escape channels and refuge passages for fugitives on their way to freedom. Therefore, the all-encompassing abolitionists 'movement was not strictly about the freedoms they sought to endow upon blacks; it also provided precedent information for future organizations working toward equality. The Market Revolution transformed women's position dramatically. Thus, as it brought new sources of economic activity for some women, old tradition-bound gender norms grew ever deeper (Cott, 2021). Driven from a social and legal perspective, the women's rights movement began expanding reform. It provided a springboard for serious, systematic endeavors to promote the realization of women's rights. Not only visionary leaders but also great champions of women's suffrage-which was one with the more extensive rights for all, laying a solid Page 4 of 7 - AI Writing Submission Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329 Page 4 of 7 - AI Writing Submission Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329
3 groundwork that set much broader social changes in motion before finally arriving where we are today heavily influenced by feminist. The turbulent changes wrought by the ever-changing economic scene in America between 1800 and 1859 set a compelling call for educational reform. With this view in mind, pioneers of educational reforms, including the towering Horace Mann, opposed with great favor every measure that would cultivate a well-educated and abundantly qualified workforce. Their demands revolved around creating a free public education and compulsory schooling, in which all citizens would receive an elementary education regardless of social class (Griffin, 2018). Its purpose was not simply to meet an industrializing society's short-term needs but also so that there would be general social and economic mobility a more equitable citizenry better able to cope with the challenges of a rapidly changing world. As society industrialized at the beginning of this century, factories appeared in every nook and cranny. At this time, the urban working class expanded as well. Such an adjustment led to labor movements; the workers combined their efforts and faced these pervasive problems in working conditions. These combined to provoke concerted efforts on the part of labor activists. The labor movement served as a springboard for broader social change and laid the groundwork on which later movements sought to win workers 'rights and improve working conditions (Griffin, 2018). New labor laws and standards were established because of the conflict and strife of labor movements. These reform movements in the early years of this century reflected a kind of social and economic restructuring that came to be called a market revolution, as well as their sense throughout American society that justice, equality, and human decency were all needed. The Industrial Revolution laid the foundation for mass movements that dealt with problems involving Page 5 of 7 - AI Writing Submission Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329 Page 5 of 7 - AI Writing Submission Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329
4 abolition, women's rights, education, and labor. They all represented faith in building on existing unjust systems to establish a new order of fairness, not coercion. Page 6 of 7 - AI Writing Submission Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329 Page 6 of 7 - AI Writing Submission Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329
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5 References Cott, N. F. (2021). The bonds of womanhood: “woman’s sphere” in New England, 1780 -1835. In Google Books . Yale University Press. https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=FyEMEAAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PT5& dq=Women%27s+Rights+Movement+during+Market+Revolution+in+the+first+half+of +the+1800s+journal&ots=pkKTmz-iC6&sig=RuTTZ82_mdgSUX69k4nqMiLzTjQ Griffin, S. (2018). Anti-slavery utopias: communitarian labor reform and the abolitionist movement. Journal of the Civil War Era , 8 (2), 243 268. https://www.jstor.org/stable/26478058 Sinha, M. (2019). The problem of abolition in the age of capitalism and slavery in the age of revolution, 1770 1823, by David Brion Davis. The American Historical Review , 124 (1), 144 163. https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhy578 Page 7 of 7 - AI Writing Submission Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329 Page 7 of 7 - AI Writing Submission Submission ID trn:oid:::1:2791042329