Reading comp PrepTest 103 · Section 4 · Question 12
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Humanities
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- James Porter researched and wrote about the African influence evident in the work of African American artists.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Porter was the first to identify the African influence on visual art in the Americas (first sentence)
- Porter studied African American crafts of the 1700s and 1800s and found West African influences (third-fourth sentences)
- Author’s attitude: “first scholar” (first sentence); “much of what is known” (first sentence); “research revealed” (third sentence); “linked them iconographically” (third sentence); “establish clearly” (fourth sentence)
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- Porter published a book that was the first of its kind in 1943 tracing the African influences on African American art.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Part of Porter’s book showed that Robert S. Duncanson and Joshua Johnston, painters of the Hudson River School, were of African ancestry (first-third sentences)
- Alain LeRoy Locke, a fellow professor, had written two other books by 1943 devoted to African American art, but his books didn’t trace African precursors like Porter’s did (fifth-seventh sentences)
- Porter was careful in his own art to refer to the cultural history of African peoples (eighth sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “commonly thought” (second sentence); “proved definitively” (third sentence); “comprehensive volume” (fourth sentence); “only two other books” (fifth sentence); “neither addressed the critical issue” (seventh sentence); “painstakingly integrating” (seventh sentence); “especially attuned” (eighth sentence); “conscious effort” (eighth sentence); “extensive knowledge” (eighth sentence)
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- Porter’s later accomplishments included tracing the biographical details of African American artists, revising his 1943 book, and making extensive notes for an unfinished work dealing with the influence of African art on the art of the Western world.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Porter revised and expanded his 1943 book (first sentence)
- Porter determined the birth year of painter Patrick Reason, and identified a grave in San Francisco as that of sculptor Edmonia Lewis (second sentence)
- Porter left extensive notes for an unfinished work dealing with the influence of African art on the art of the Western world (third sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “constantly revising and correcting” (first sentence); “later achievements” (second sentence); “definitive reckoning” (second sentence); “extensive notes” (third sentence); “riches” (third sentence)
Main Point: Painter and historian James Porter pioneered the study of how African influences can be discerned in the work of African American artists.
Key Lines?Paragraph 1, Sentence 1 (P1 S1) - Importance of James Porter’s work
P2 S7 - Why Porter’s work was groundbreaking
P3 S3 - Scope of unfinished work
Meta-Structure?Innovative Subject: This passage uses an Innovative Subject Meta-Structure. The author introduces artist and art historian James Porter as the first scholar to trace the African influences evident in African American art. Porter’s work was groundbreaking because only one other academic had written about African American art at the time when Porter published his book on the subject, and Porter was the first scholar to write about African iconography in African American art. His later work laid the foundation for exploring how African art influenced Western art more generally.
The author’s perspective is evident throughout the passage. The author admires Porter’s work, innovative scholarship, and painstaking research. The author is also at pains to point out how Porter’s own artistic background played into his research and made the enterprise of documenting the lives of African American artists more personal (P2 S8, P3 S2).
Last Thoughts?This passage makes an argument for the historical importance of a scholar’s work. There are no views presented in the passage to oppose the author’s perspective, and the strongest voice in the passage is the author’s. This fact makes understanding and tracing the argument made relatively straightforward; there are no nuances of viewpoint or argument to keep track of.
Question prompt
Why the credited answer is right
Credited answer: A
The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.
Question Type
Strategy Overview
Answer Anticipation
Answer choices
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AThey often contained figures Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A matches the stem
(A) Is this answer choice in line with what the author says about Porter’s own paintings in P2 S8?
Yes. The author says that Porter consciously tried to maintain ties to African artisanship in his paintings (P2 S8). This could include putting figures or images derived from the work of African artisans into the paintings, which is what this answer choice says.
This looks like a strong contender, but let’s go through the other choices and see if there are any stronger ones.
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BThey fueled his interest Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B is not credited
(B) Is this answer choice in line with what the author says about Porter’s own paintings in P2 S8?
No. There is no hint given by the author that Porter’s artistic bent led to his career in art history; for all we know, Porter might have been interested in art history and then decided to turn his hand to painting.
There is no evidence in the passage to support this answer choice, so it can’t be the right one.
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CThey were used in Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C is not credited
(C) Is this answer choice in line with what the author says about Porter’s own paintings in P2 S8?
No. The author does not hint that Porter included his own paintings in his books about African American art, and because this assertion lacks all support in the passage, we can conclude it is not the right choice.
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DThey were a deliberate Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D is not credited
(D) Is this answer choice in line with what the author says about Porter’s own paintings in P2 S8?
No. This answer choice suggests Porter was self-serving, similarly to (C). There is no indication whatever in the passage that Porter painted in order to prove the truth of his own theories. The tenor of P2 S8 is that Porter deeply believed in the importance of preserving the African influences in his own paintings, and that is why he consciously included them, not that he was painting in this way only to prove the theories he’d come up with in his book.
Because it lacks support in the passage, this is not the right answer choice.
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EThey were done after Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E is not credited
(E) Is this answer choice in line with what the author says about Porter’s own paintings in P2 S8?
No. The passage does not indicate when in Porter’s career he did his paintings, whether they were done before or after or during the time when he was engaged in scholarship.
Because there is no evidence for this answer choice in the passage, it is not the right one.
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