題目 1 · Part (a) Source Comparison & Contrast
15 分Read the two sources below and answer the question that follows.
**Source A**
'This bill is at once a swaggering betrayal of a solemn compact and a profound insult to the cause of freedom. By erasing the ancient line of thirty-six thirty, which has stood for a generation as a sacred wall against the advance of human bondage, it flings open the fertile plains of the West to the blighting curse of slavery. To cloak this aggression under the name of 'popular sovereignty' is a mockery. It does not empower the settler; it empowers the slave master to chain his fellow man on soil that was forever dedicated to free labor. We are asked to sacrifice peace, honor, and the Constitution itself to satisfy the insatiable demands of the Slave Power.'
*From a speech by Charles Sumner, an anti-slavery Senator from Massachusetts, delivered in the US Senate, February 1854.*
**Source B**
'The principle of popular sovereignty is the very cornerstone of our democratic republic. Why should the citizens who migrate to Kansas or Nebraska be treated as infants, incapable of self-government? If they are fit to govern themselves in Illinois or Massachusetts, they are fit to decide for themselves whether slavery shall exist within their new borders. The Missouri Compromise line was not a permanent treaty but a temporary expedient, superseded by the great compromise measures of 1850, which established the rule of non-intervention by Congress. To deny the people of the territories the right to frame their own domestic institutions is to deny the fundamental liberties won in the American Revolution.'
*From a speech by Stephen A. Douglas, Democratic Senator from Illinois, defending the Kansas-Nebraska Bill in the US Senate, March 1854.*
**Question**
Compare and contrast the views expressed in Sources A and B regarding the concept of popular sovereignty in the Kansas-Nebraska Act.
**Source A**
'This bill is at once a swaggering betrayal of a solemn compact and a profound insult to the cause of freedom. By erasing the ancient line of thirty-six thirty, which has stood for a generation as a sacred wall against the advance of human bondage, it flings open the fertile plains of the West to the blighting curse of slavery. To cloak this aggression under the name of 'popular sovereignty' is a mockery. It does not empower the settler; it empowers the slave master to chain his fellow man on soil that was forever dedicated to free labor. We are asked to sacrifice peace, honor, and the Constitution itself to satisfy the insatiable demands of the Slave Power.'
*From a speech by Charles Sumner, an anti-slavery Senator from Massachusetts, delivered in the US Senate, February 1854.*
**Source B**
'The principle of popular sovereignty is the very cornerstone of our democratic republic. Why should the citizens who migrate to Kansas or Nebraska be treated as infants, incapable of self-government? If they are fit to govern themselves in Illinois or Massachusetts, they are fit to decide for themselves whether slavery shall exist within their new borders. The Missouri Compromise line was not a permanent treaty but a temporary expedient, superseded by the great compromise measures of 1850, which established the rule of non-intervention by Congress. To deny the people of the territories the right to frame their own domestic institutions is to deny the fundamental liberties won in the American Revolution.'
*From a speech by Stephen A. Douglas, Democratic Senator from Illinois, defending the Kansas-Nebraska Bill in the US Senate, March 1854.*
**Question**
Compare and contrast the views expressed in Sources A and B regarding the concept of popular sovereignty in the Kansas-Nebraska Act.
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解題
### Analysis of Similarities
* **Subject Matter:** Both sources focus on the political implications of the Kansas-Nebraska Act and the introduction of 'popular sovereignty' to decide the issue of slavery in the Western territories.
* **The Missouri Compromise:** Both sources acknowledge that the Kansas-Nebraska Act departs from the geographic boundary established by the Missouri Compromise of 1820 (the 36°30' parallel).
* **Core Values:** Both speakers appeal to fundamental American values—liberty, the Constitution, and self-determination—to justify their opposing stances.
### Analysis of Differences
* **View of Popular Sovereignty:**
* **Source A** describes popular sovereignty as a 'mockery' and a 'cloak' for Southern aggression, arguing it does not truly empower settlers but rather serves to expand 'human bondage' and the 'Slave Power'.
* **Source B** views popular sovereignty as the 'cornerstone of our democratic republic' and a natural extension of self-government, arguing that settlers should have the same rights as citizens of established states to choose their own domestic institutions.
* **Status of the Missouri Compromise:**
* **Source A** views the 36°30' line as a 'solemn compact' and a 'sacred wall' that should remain permanent.
* **Source B** argues that the line was merely a 'temporary expedient' and had already been made obsolete by the 'non-intervention' principles of the Compromise of 1850.
### Contextual Evaluation & Provenance
* **Source A** reflects the intense moral outrage of Northern Free-Soilers and abolitionists (who would soon form the Republican Party). Sumner's purpose is to rally Northern public opinion against what they perceived as a aggressive Southern slave conspiracy.
* **Source B** represents the view of Northern Democrats led by Douglas, who sought to resolve the explosive issue of slavery expansion by removing it from congressional debate and placing it in the hands of territorial voters. Douglas’s purpose is to defend his bill, maintain national party unity, and appeal to democratic principles of local self-government.
* **Subject Matter:** Both sources focus on the political implications of the Kansas-Nebraska Act and the introduction of 'popular sovereignty' to decide the issue of slavery in the Western territories.
* **The Missouri Compromise:** Both sources acknowledge that the Kansas-Nebraska Act departs from the geographic boundary established by the Missouri Compromise of 1820 (the 36°30' parallel).
* **Core Values:** Both speakers appeal to fundamental American values—liberty, the Constitution, and self-determination—to justify their opposing stances.
### Analysis of Differences
* **View of Popular Sovereignty:**
* **Source A** describes popular sovereignty as a 'mockery' and a 'cloak' for Southern aggression, arguing it does not truly empower settlers but rather serves to expand 'human bondage' and the 'Slave Power'.
* **Source B** views popular sovereignty as the 'cornerstone of our democratic republic' and a natural extension of self-government, arguing that settlers should have the same rights as citizens of established states to choose their own domestic institutions.
* **Status of the Missouri Compromise:**
* **Source A** views the 36°30' line as a 'solemn compact' and a 'sacred wall' that should remain permanent.
* **Source B** argues that the line was merely a 'temporary expedient' and had already been made obsolete by the 'non-intervention' principles of the Compromise of 1850.
### Contextual Evaluation & Provenance
* **Source A** reflects the intense moral outrage of Northern Free-Soilers and abolitionists (who would soon form the Republican Party). Sumner's purpose is to rally Northern public opinion against what they perceived as a aggressive Southern slave conspiracy.
* **Source B** represents the view of Northern Democrats led by Douglas, who sought to resolve the explosive issue of slavery expansion by removing it from congressional debate and placing it in the hands of territorial voters. Douglas’s purpose is to defend his bill, maintain national party unity, and appeal to democratic principles of local self-government.
評分準則
### Mark Scheme (15 Marks)
* **Level 4 (12–15 marks):**
* Identifies clear, developed similarities and differences between the two sources regarding popular sovereignty and the Missouri Compromise.
* Evaluates the sources using historical context and/or analysis of provenance (such as Charles Sumner's anti-slavery position vs. Stephen Douglas's political goals) to explain *why* their perspectives differ so radically.
* **Level 3 (8–11 marks):**
* Makes direct, developed comparisons pointing out both agreements and disagreements.
* Explains how Source A sees popular sovereignty as a deceptive tool of the 'Slave Power', whereas Source B sees it as a vital democratic right. Explains their contrasting views on the permanence of the Missouri Compromise.
* **Level 2 (4–7 marks):**
* Identifies similarities and/or differences, but tends to treat the sources sequentially or focus heavily on one aspect of comparison without developing the other.
* **Level 1 (1–3 marks):**
* Offers basic, surface-level observations with little or no direct comparison or historical contextualization.
* **Level 4 (12–15 marks):**
* Identifies clear, developed similarities and differences between the two sources regarding popular sovereignty and the Missouri Compromise.
* Evaluates the sources using historical context and/or analysis of provenance (such as Charles Sumner's anti-slavery position vs. Stephen Douglas's political goals) to explain *why* their perspectives differ so radically.
* **Level 3 (8–11 marks):**
* Makes direct, developed comparisons pointing out both agreements and disagreements.
* Explains how Source A sees popular sovereignty as a deceptive tool of the 'Slave Power', whereas Source B sees it as a vital democratic right. Explains their contrasting views on the permanence of the Missouri Compromise.
* **Level 2 (4–7 marks):**
* Identifies similarities and/or differences, but tends to treat the sources sequentially or focus heavily on one aspect of comparison without developing the other.
* **Level 1 (1–3 marks):**
* Offers basic, surface-level observations with little or no direct comparison or historical contextualization.