137k views
5 votes
How does the author describe the quilt "Ms. Sue, Alive and Liberated?" A as a collection of hopeful visions from many different women about how the world could change if the ERA passed B as one woman's vision of the world after the ERA passes, including different things she personally wanted to accomplish Cas a collection of different women's memories of times in their lives when they'd been mistreated Das a collaboration between two female artists, one from England and one from California, who became friends.​

How does the author describe the quilt "Ms. Sue, Alive and Liberated?" A-example-1
User Zazaeil
by
7.4k points

1 Answer

1 vote

The quilt "Ms. Sue, Alive and Liberated" is not explicitly described in the provided information. But More relatively option A is correct.

Speculatively, it could represent a combination of women's hopes, struggles, and experiences related to the ERA and the women's rights movement, similar to the themes depicted in other artworks from the same era.

The quilt "Ms. Sue, Alive and Liberated" is not directly referenced in the provided information. However, if it is related to the wider context of quilts and artworks inspired by the women's movement and the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), one might infer that such a quilt could reflect a myriad of women's hopes, struggles, and visions for equality. Given the historical context, it could be seen as a representation of women's collective aspirations and memories, including a reflection on their experiences with discrimination and their fight for equal voting rights, as in the quilt 'Dreams Realized (8.5.48)' which commemorates African American women's suffrage efforts post-Voting Rights Act of 1965. Without specific information about the quilt "Ms. Sue, Alive and Liberated", we can only speculate based on the ERA and quilt artworks representing themes of women's rights and empowerment from that era.

User Blimie
by
7.2k points