Answer:
please I don't understand your language
There is no option for your question but by the definiiton of Cult of domesticity is possible to understand the concept.
Between 1820 and the Civil War, the growth of new industries,
businesses and professions helped to create in America a new middle class. (The Middle class consisted of families whose husbands worked as lawyers, office workers, factory managers, merchants, teachers, physicians, and others.) At that moment it was important for those groups developed the idea of womanhood. It means to create standards for women who belong to that group. A type of rules. Those rules had essentially four parts‐‐four characteristics any good and proper young woman should cultivate: piety, purity, domesticity, and submissiveness. It´s important to remember that rules were created to white women. At that time slavery still happening in the United States.
The book of Charles Dana Gibson, No Time for Politics, 1910 says:
"The Cult of Domesticity developed as family lost its function as
economic unit. Many of links between family and community closed off as work left home. Emergence of market economy and the devaluation of womenʹs work. Increasingly, then, home became a self‐contained unit. Privacy was a crucial issue for nineteenth‐century families, and can see this concern in the spatial development of suburbs in urban areas as families sought single family dwellings were they could be even more isolated from others. Women remained in the home, as a kind of cultural hostage".
Slaves standing up and trying to fight for their freedom.
Answer: Western Africa.
Explanation:
Blues and jazz are influenced by African rhythms brought through the transatlantic slave trade that took slaves mostly from central and western Africa to be bought by European slave traders and sent to the New World. Gospel music, the African-based rhythm that later developed into jazz, had its roots in the call and response practiced in the slaves´ spirituals.
The Renaissance – that cultural, political, scientific and intellectual explosion in Europe between the 14th and 17th centuries – represents perhaps the most profoundly important period in human development since the fall of Ancient Rome. ... The Renaissance changed the world in just about every way one could think of