The Progressive era’s birth-control movement was characterized by: (A) public lectures on sexual freedom and contraception by activists such as Emma Goldman. (B) little beyond reassuring women that they had the right to refuse their husband’s sexual advances. (C) the distribution of birth-control devices by Margaret Sanger. (D) a belief in a woman’s right to an active sexual life, but only in conjunction with childbearing. (E) A and C

Respuesta :

The correct answers are letter A and C.

Explanation:  Progressive Era was a vision to believe in the future, the uninterrupted progress of humanity in its greatest qualities and values, such as freedom and equality, and so on. These are typical traits of progressive ideology.