See, your question has some grammatical structure problems, but I think I know what you're asking for.
I will reword your question and answer it to the best of my abilities.
Anything that is about government affairs or how to run a nation is political.
What's about history, how people lived, or social matters is usually cultural.
<span>Which is cultural and which is political (assuming you're referring to those titles listed below)?:
</span><span>In the Navy: A Record of the Navy from 1775 to 1875-- Political
Sculptures of the Late Qing Dynasty-- Cultural
The Social Impact of Literature from the Age of Enlightenment-- Cultural
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<span>Henry IV versus Pope Gregory VII: Who Could Appoint Church Officials?-- Political
The American Revolution: Growing Tensions Between America and Britain-- Political
The Influences of the Star Wars Movies on American Society-- Cultural </span><span>
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<span>The "Cult of Domesticity" was a prevailing idea (chiefly among the upper and middle classes) that a woman's "true" nature was to be domestic and therefore, be the chief caretaker of the home and that which came with it. To that end, it was made more likely with the advent of the Market Revolution and the saturation of ideas and inventions to enable a woman to "better" keep her home and family. Given the class-based nature, it is a logical conclusion because of the inherent wealth of those strata of society.</span>
Yes because before August 1964 this was recording from May 1964 where Johnson is trying to decide whether he should send off the children to draft them or not. The U.S. pledged $15 million worth of military aid to france to help fight in Vietnam
In 1790, the national bank Hamilton established: national currency
By the time national currency was established, it mandated people who live in the country to only acknowledged the national currency as the standard medium of exchange for every transaction. This was a part of the agreement that was made on the Constitutional Convention on September 17, 1787.
Answer:
D. Journalists and reformers
Explanation:
They were the journalists in the Progressive Era (1890's to the 1920's). Upton Sinclair and Ida Tarbell were two of them.
Hope this helps, and please mark me brainliest if it does!