- Fri Apr 10, 2020 12:47 pm
#74764
I think there are a few problems with answer D, Nicholas, and the first is that the passage, and Stilgoe's book, appear to be dealing ONLY with railroads. Answer D is far too broad! "Romantic era distrust" may be limited just to the railroads, and there is no reason to believe that it extended to any other social or economic developments.
Also, it is the author, not Stilgoe, that looks at the railroad's broader impact on social and economic developments. We're supposed to be looking for what the author thinks Stilgoe meant, not what the author thinks about what Stilgoe wrote. Subtle difference there, perhaps, but crucial!
Finally, Stilgoe is not the one that implying that the view was held only by a minority of intellectuals. The author is saying "Stilgoe is wrong - it wasn't widespread, but limited to those few intellectuals." We need to know what Stilgoe was implying, not how the author responds to that implication.
Start with a prephrase, as we always should. What did Stilgoe mean to refer to when using that phrase? A general feeling among the population between about 1830 and 1880 that the railroads were not so great. The author disagrees that it was a general feeling, but indicates that Stilgoe thought it was (and was wrong).
Adam M. Tyson
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